Welcome to the Math Teachers at Play Blog Carnival Edition #111! I was included in the 77th edition and have wanted to contribute ever since then. So I am super excited to bring you ways to play math with children and students. You are going to want to play right away, but first, here are some fun things about the number 111 (Eleventy-One)!
We have to start with NASA, in honor of the Total Solar Eclipse we just experienced! STS-111 was a space shuttle mission to the International Space Station flown by Endeavor.
111 would be the magic constant for the smallest magic square composed only of prime numbers if 1 were counted as a prime.
A six-by-six magic square using the numbers 1 through 36 also has a magic constant of 111.
Numbers like 111 that appear the same under 180 degree rotations are called strobograms. Fun!
If you concatenated three copies of 111 and then squared the result, you get
(111,111,111)2 = 12,345,678,987,654,321
For more information or to host the MTaP go here. You can host at your blog or submit posts!
I had a professional development opportunity this summer where Kent Haines was my trainer. I quickly found out we were in the same circles on Twitter. I have enjoyed reading about how he plays math with his children. He has extended that math to other children in his community through sessions at his local library. Read more about how he created his own set of polyhexes here.
http://www.kenthaines.com |
Bedtime Math is a website that offers parents and kids number fun at home. It has different levels of daily fun facts and riddles. Use this website daily to spark conversations with your children from little to big!
http://bedtimemath.org/fun-math-art-on-trucks/ |
Making Sense of Math in the PYP is a collection of number talk transcripts between a teacher and student. After setting the stage with the script, Lee C. Dawson asks us to think about what makes sense about what the student did, what the students work tells us about their thinking, and what we would say or do next with the student.
http://pypsensemaking.blogspot.ca |
http://www.tabletalkmath.com/previous-newsletters/week-45-eggs |
Number talks are an amazing way to play math at school! Tina Cardone's post about using images and simply asking "How many?" will be something I implement in my classroom this year. The rich conversations that she showed us from doing this is important to students' number sense building. She linked to her collection of photographs as well as the collection of this number talk site.
http://drawingonmath.blogspot.com/2017/06/how-many.html?m=1 |
Denise Gaskins' post "What Number Am I?" could easily be adapted to a mental math number talk. I have also seen this used as a 20 questions type icebreaker with the number on a name tag on students' backs.
https://denisegaskins.com/2008/06/16/math-game-what-number-am-i/amp/ |
Math On-A-Stick |
https://playwithyourmath.com/2017/07/27/3-chicken-nuggets/ |
https://saravanderwerf.com/2017/05/29/you-need-a-play-table-in-your-math-classroom/ |
My Play Table |