In my opinion I would get books that would help you to get ideas on the best way to teach it. I would also recommend getting a reward system to enforce motivation.
it depends on what kind of math you are doing for school or teaching or just having fun.
The best is to have a college degree and be a math major. Many math teachers do not have degrees in math, however, my personal opinion is that formal math education is a big plus (pun intended) for math teachers. Some math teachers have computer science backgrounds. In many cases, teachers who want to teach math without a math degree need to pass a test to do so. So if you want to be a math teacher, go to college and major in math! Then you also have to get a teaching credential. Some schools have combined math bs and teaching programs.
You should try going to a school to find subtraction worksheets. At someone you work with or go to another school and ask. Other math teachers will have these.
In school terms, science and math go hand in hand. However, math is everywhere. In the home, food or things like furniture is measured with mathematical units. One has to do math when shopping, adding up prices. In many careers, such as finance, business, science, teaching, workers need to know at least basic math skills.
go to teaching school
After getting BA in Teaching go to hell
Look for teaching websites, and go from there! Ask other teachers you know if they have any that you can make copies of. I'm sure they would be happy to help you out!
But if I had to pick one of the two, I'd go with the LCM.
Mary Fairafax Sonerville was famous for teaching herself math and science.
Have not gotten to that in my granddaughter's math....but I would imagine taking it to the common denominator first and go from there. That's how you do fractions.
Math, math, and more math!
Exactly....DO YOUR MATH!!