Last week, I showed you a lesson out of this book based on a great story about the number 1000. Today I want to share with you another favorite out of this book.
This is a great resource that will help you get even more out of your math literature collection.
This book is full of activities that go along with 20 different books at the grade 3-5 level. They also have similar books for grades K-2
and grades 6-8
.
This lesson is based on this great story
This lesson is based on this great story
This book is part of a series of animal math books written by Ann Whitehead Nagda
. My other favorites in this series include Polar Bear Math
and Chimp Math
.
The lesson from the Math And Nonfiction
After reading the story, the kids we so into the story of T.J. I knew I had them hooked. The lesson from the Math and Nonfiction book did some really creative things from here.
First, I showed a pictograph from the beginning of the story. This is one graph I made sure I didn't show them when reading the story. I covered much of it up with sticky notes.
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A peak at part of the graph. |
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Kids graph themselves by tiger type. Extra kids got to be tiger wranglers and help me line everyone up |
Here is where I was super impressed with this lesson. The kids moved into one long line and then closed the line into a circle to make a circle graph. I had never thought about making this connection for kids between a pictograph and a circle graph. It worked very well and the kids were so impressed.
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After the kids moved from a line into a circle, I had them stand shoulder to shoulder and then sit down. We used meter sticks to make the partitions between the different groups of tigers. |
How do you use your math literature collection to enhance and enrich your students' mathematical understanding?
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