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Math-terpieces: The Art of Problem-Solving

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NEW YORK TIMES bestselling author Greg Tang challenges kids to solve problems creatively while introducing art history. In his most ground-breaking book since THE BEST OF TIMES (Fall 2002), Greg Tang underscores the importance of four basic rules in problem-solving. Keeping an open mind, looking for unusual number combinations, using multiple skills (like subtracting to add) and looking for patterns, will guarantee any child success in math. In MATH-TERPIECES, Tang continues to challenge kids with his innovative approach to math, and uses art history to expand his vision for creative problem-solving.

32 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2003

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Greg Tang

39 books21 followers

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 57 reviews
485 reviews5 followers
July 13, 2010
In this cross-curricular concept book, the preceding page contains a historical painting with a caption of title, artist and date as well as a brief rhyme about the painter and a grouping puzzle to be solved on the next page. Degas and dancing shoes, Monet and lilies, Renoir and umbrellas, Cezanne and peaches, van Gogh and stars, Seurat and hot spots, Matisse and fish, Picasso and eyes, Mondrian and squares, Dali and melting clocks, Pollock and paint splotches, Warhol and soup cans all cleverly convey a bit of art appreciation and history. Color photography of iconic art images are imposed on background of pastel abstract shapes while identifying features of a painting style are rendered in brighter pastels on the opposite page. At the back of this math book are solutions along with more detailed text about how “to systematically test and keep track of possible combinations of groups.” A visual feast for the eyes followed by a useful application of addition, Math-terpieces is a fine title to add to a library’s collection, whether public or school. School Library Journal recommends using this book as the “basis for collaborative lessons between math and art teachers (Wysocki, 2004), but definitely the book aligns with the grade two math standard of number sense (California Department of Education, 1997).
Profile Image for Wallace Johnson.
39 reviews
October 15, 2012
Genre: I placed this title in my reading log under Children’s Counting Picture Books

Summary: Putting math and art together, the author has created an interesting and colorful way to learn basic math skills.

Critique:

(a.) I feel the strength in this title lies within the author’s aptitude to put historic pictures to work in a young child’s mind in order to help them use basic addition and subtraction skills.

(b.) Every other page shows a historic piece of art. For example, page 8 shows The Umbrellas (1881-86) and page 22 shows The Persistence of Memory (1931). Also on that same page is a short arithmetic rhyme to solve an equation located on the corresponding page. On page 22, the reader is tasked with “Finding SEVEN ways to make an 8,” using the clocks found on page 23.

(c.) Intriguing way to put the mind of a young child to work. This can be done while admiring colorful art, reading a rhyme and doing math. The reader is definitely learning and having fun at the same time in this fashion.

Curriculum Connection: What an enjoyable way to learn and have fun in a group read aloud in the classroom. We can incorporate not only math, but history, art and rhyming as well.
Profile Image for Hannah Schweiter.
58 reviews19 followers
March 19, 2015
This awesome addition book mixes mathematics and the arts. This book would be a great reference for teachers with students at all levels of addition (since the difficulty in the game can vary).

Summary: Visually oriented math challenges, inspired by historically significant art, give readers several ways to practice addition by regrouping several different parts to make a whole.

Critique: Math-terpieces helps students practice breaking apart the sum of a math problem to find what two pieces of information might give us that sum. This book is a great way to discuss addition with your students because even though this book is classified as fiction, it has several nonfiction elements to it including the math and the historical art. Math-terpieces would also be a good way to introduce (or see if any of the students guess it) the zero concept. Because, zero plus blank is an option with every problem on how to get to a sum of seven (you can see it in the pictures). This book has great rhythmic motion, no didacticism, several addition-prompting questions, and cultural influence.
Profile Image for Dolly.
Author 1 book671 followers
September 24, 2011
We really enjoyed reading this book about art and math together. We've read all of Greg Tang's math books and we loved the challenges, the rhymes and especially in this case, the art education. We loved the brain-teasing aspect of the problems (making various combinations of items add up to the same sum) and we loved taking turns finding solutions. We would only do a couple of problems together each time, but our girls would always ask to do more. We hope that Greg Tang writes more of these books!

Profile Image for Brandy.
21 reviews2 followers
January 2, 2009
This is the most recent addition to my children’s book collection, and it has quickly become one of my favorites. For anyone interested in “multiple intelligences”- this is gold. It incorporates classic works of art, mathematics, poetry and stellar vocabulary. A great interactive book to read and enjoy with the kiddos, and a nice Art 101 refresher to boot.
129 reviews9 followers
April 27, 2008
Tang does a great job with this book--it combines art masterpieces, a (VERY) brief introduction to art styles--in poetry, no less!--and then a math puzzler for each piece of art. This is BASIC math--all addition facts. Lots of fun for little ones! A great living math book.
1 review
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October 7, 2024
Math-terpieces combines math and art to help kids develop problem-solving skills. In the book, readers are introduced to famous paintings from artists such as Picasso, Van Gogh, Monet, and others. Along with these paintings, there are short rhyming poems that end with a math problem. These problems challenge students to group items together in different ways to reach a given number, allowing them to practice addition while sharpening their problem-solving abilities.

Math-terpieces addresses several mathematical concepts and teaching strategies. One key alignment is the use of multiple representations, as the book uses visual models to show how objects can be grouped, helping students connect math to real-world contexts. This visual approach enables students to complete the puzzles and explore different ways to reach a given number. The book also emphasizes that there is more than one way to solve a problem, with each page asking students to find multiple solutions, which aligns with the textbook's focus on encouraging flexibility in problem-solving. The gradual increase in difficulty across the book also reflects the scaffolding approach discussed in the textbook, where support is reduced as students gain confidence in their skills.
Profile Image for Jessie.
2,482 reviews32 followers
May 31, 2017
Each spread introduces an artist and a style (with both clearly stated) using one painting (again, with title given) as an example. It's a good overview of a hundred or so years of painting in the West for kids.

Each spread provides a prompt to make a certain number in another number of ways from sets on the other side of the spread. All the numbers to be made are at most ten.

Students working on counting small numbers and subitizing would find the prompts very difficult, but the book could be adjusted to work on those skills. This is most aimed at students working on addition of small numbers. (Note here that there's a lot of addition of more than two numbers. Three is common, and there were a couple of sets of four.) Tang said in the intro that this could foreshadow permutations and combinations for older students. I found that a bit of a stress, but the relationship to partitions is clearer.

A ten frame might be a useful manipulative here. I could also see having students choose a painter and painting and then having them make their own sum challenge from there. (Essentially, make a new spread in the style of the book.)
197 reviews
August 31, 2017
This book teaches children to add creatively rather than count in order to find out how many objects are on each page. I think the skill of looking for patterns to speed count is nicely taught, though it doesn't really coach kids to choose strategies for themselves - it just hints at the particular one they're supposed to use with a riddle. Illustrations and word choice are geared to a young audience, but the riddles are not - so the preschool crowd might enjoy the book but they're just going to count the objects anyway. Older kids (2nd grade and up, probably) will get the riddles.

Greg Tang has several books all built around the same concept, including Math for All Seasons, Math Appeal, and Math-terpieces. So far the Grapes of Math is my favorite. In this one, the riddles are a little less complicated; I feel like the math concept is taught better in some of the other books but this one has the added benefit of art exposure.
Profile Image for Jo Oehrlein.
6,361 reviews9 followers
May 30, 2017
Each two page spread features a well known painting, a rhyming problem/challenge, and then groups of an object from the painting that you need to try to add together to get the stated number.

Example:
The first painting is a Degas ballet dancer painting.
The challenge is to make 7.
The harder challenge is to make 7 three different ways.
On the facing page are groups of 5, 2, 4, 3, and 1 pointe shoes (with no numbers).
5+2 = 7
4+3 = 7
4 + 2 + 1 = 7

In the book, all the goals (and all the objects) are ten or less, so the book is about making 10. Sometimes you need 2 addends and sometimes more.
Profile Image for Mary T.
1,936 reviews21 followers
August 4, 2018
I had a hard time with this one. Like, I didn't even understand what the questions were asking (and had to look back at the answers). It just didn't make sense to me. I liked Grapes of Math much better.

Curriculum tie-ins - math, grouping, problem solving
Profile Image for Leah Delcamp.
245 reviews11 followers
August 8, 2024
This brilliant book combines famous artwork and poetic math riddles to create visually oriented problems to solve. It’s an engaging way to teach critical thinking and math skills. I will definitely check out more from this clever picture book series!
Profile Image for Ellen.
46 reviews7 followers
February 13, 2019
I loved how Greg Tang used famous art pieces by Mondrian, Degas, Picasso, and others to help children practice adding.
Profile Image for Amy.
102 reviews41 followers
February 18, 2019
I love the concept of this book. It takes famous paintings and has students do math problems from the paintings. I love the art & the way it asks students to problem solve.
422 reviews2 followers
May 2, 2019
Want to buy this one a great math book for little ones and a great art book too
Profile Image for Ashley.
167 reviews
December 4, 2023
Interesting challenge for primary grades, but could be a fun brain break for junior grades.
Profile Image for Jackie Law.
446 reviews23 followers
April 13, 2025
fun and cleverly done. check this one out, parents with kids who are young
31 reviews3 followers
October 8, 2018
A super creative way to integrate art and math! This book has activities and challenges while teaching about masterpieces. I love it! (picture book)
37 reviews3 followers
May 10, 2015
Personal Reaction: The previous C&T 344 teacher Beth Cigler recommended for us to use this book in our classroom when we teach math to our elementary schoolers. I found this book in the LRC and I got so excited because I could not wait to read all the way through it. It was a great read and I definitely recommend this.

Read Aloud: This book is informational both in math and art terms. It would be a good joint study/lesson. It deals with several different types of art including impressionism and post-impressionism. In math terms it deals with grouping and patterns and finding more than one with the same picture. A good lesson would be to read through this book and then have kids find a painting online in groups and come up with a good scenario to go with it.

Independent Read: This would be a good independent read for a second grader. Grouping is really not a difficult type of math to do so I am confident that a second grader could do each of these activities on his or her own. This book would mainly be read by children very interested in math or art.

For nonfiction: This book has an author's note as well as the solutions and art notes in the back of the book. This book is very different but I think it is much better and more interesting than many of the math books I have ever read. I would teach the math problems and the solutions to the kids in numbers rather than picture form which may help some kdis who have trouble thinking outside of the box.
37 reviews
May 9, 2015
Personal Reaction:
This book would be a terrific resource to have within a first grade classroom because it combines art, math, and even poetry! Each page consists of a famous piece of art and then the author developed a math question using a component from the painting that the reader must solve by using simple grouping (addition). This books stunning artwork of various forms of art could be used in a multitude of ways in classrooms ranging from a K-1 class to an art class.

Purpose/Use in Classroom:
This book would be a great resource for a classroom starting a math lesson due to the various problems that are available to solve. This book would be most beneficial if the teacher read it aloud then showed the 2nd page on a document camera. As a teacher I would then let my students attempt to solve the answer and then we would go over it as a class. Some conventions that were used were the solutions at the end of the book. The author put in a lot of effort and work to write down the steps that they should use in order to figure out the correct answers.There are also art notes, which go into further detail about the authors and their work.
Profile Image for Becky B.
9,294 reviews182 followers
January 30, 2014
Tang uses famous pieces of art to inspire creative rhymes and problem solving activities. On each page spread there is a masterpiece on the left followed by a rhyme that gives a little information about the art and challenges the reader to find a certain number of different ways to group the drawings on the opposite page. For example, on the page with one of Monet's famous paintings of water lilies, readers are challenged to find four ways to add the lily groups on the opposite page to make a big group of eight lilies. The opposite page has groups of 6, 5, 4, 3, 2 and 1 lilies available to be combined.

This is a nice little introduction to various artists, art forms and pieces, as well as a nice brain workout for kids. The rhymes and extra illustrations are top rate too. A great multi-disciplinary resource for the lower or middle grades.
Profile Image for Tasasha Battle.
68 reviews
Read
April 3, 2013
This book integrates math and art. As the reader turns each page they are encountered by the majestic masterpieces from a variety of artists and eras. Tang takes elements from the pieces and group them on the opposite page. It is in these groupings that students are to arrange to get the desired amount. Each grouping ranges from one to five with none of them being more than five. This book teaches first grade students about the works of famous artists as well as how to create combination of addition equations that equal the same amount. The combination equations can be either be two or three addition equations. For example, 5+2=7 or 3+2+2=7. The solutions to these equations are in the back of the book as well as how each masterpiece can be taught in the perspective of mathematics.
111 reviews
April 19, 2012
-book on solving math problems using famous art pieces
-very creative artwork, and based on the art, students are to find differnt ways to solve the problem
-strategies are explained in the back of the book, includeing adding and subtracting
-rhyming poems accompany each problem
-students can work in pairs to see the ways they can solve the problems, and then explain to each other the strategies used
-teachers can also use this as an engaging assessment tool after studying the specific strategies
-a fun activity would be for the students to have manipulatives and actually work out the problems using those manipulatives, making it more hands on
22 reviews10 followers
March 19, 2015
I typically don't love math books, because it is not my favorite subject. I will make an exception for this book though. I love how he tied famous pieces of artwork to mathematics. All throughout the book there are references to the artwork which he then ties to specific mathematical questions. He focuses the mathematical content to groupings, and abstract thinking for older children and addition for younger children. He makes practicing math a little more interesting for those who more right brained.
3 reviews
September 27, 2015
The curriculum development team folks at school are really pushing that we teach the steps of problem-solving to kids explicitly. This book isn't about the steps, but rather the strategies you can use on an ongoing basis while following those steps. I think you need both, so I think this book is a great way to get both steps and strategies talked about. The strategies in this book are: keeping an open mind, looking for unusual number combinations, using multiple skills, and looking for patterns.
Profile Image for Lisa.
186 reviews
October 29, 2014
Great book for practicing addition using pictures. Also introduces famous artists. Each pair of pages has a painting and a poem with the math riddle on one side, and something to count on the other page. For example, The Persistence of Memory by Salvador Dali is on the art/poem page, and groups of melting clocks on the counting page. Child has to find different ways to add up to various numbers up to ten. Adequate challenge for my 6yo.
Profile Image for Kara.
23 reviews
March 19, 2015
I thought the way this book was written was so clever. Personally, I am huge art fan, so pairing math with art and different artists is ingenious! Not only does this book teach relevant math topics but it exposes children to acclaimed artists and their masterpieces. I could see this book being used in a typical classroom and an art room then inspiring many extension activities.
Profile Image for Karen.
166 reviews6 followers
August 31, 2016
This book is unique and interactive! With each flip of a page, the reader is presented with a famous work of art and asked to find several different ways to group objects from the piece to arrive at a certain sum. The kids and I thoroughly enjoyed the way this book brought together math and some of our favorite paintings!
Displaying 1 - 30 of 57 reviews

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