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Category: Grades 3-5

The Artistic Side of Math – Cubism

The Artistic Side of Math – Cubism

During a unit on 2-dimensional geometry I use art to tie in the polygons we’ve been studying. I share a variety of paintings by the artist Pablo Picasso and we talk about the shapes they see. Then, using the idea of straight lines and hard edges, students create their own work of Cubism out of construction paper.

The Artistic Side of Math – Pointillism

The Artistic Side of Math – Pointillism

Tying in pointillism are during a unit on fractions, decimals, and percents is perfect! How? It begins with painter Georges Seurat. Seurat was a post-impressionist painter who painted by placing tiny, preceise brush strokes of different colors close to one another so they blend at a distance. I share with the students his painting The Circus and we discuss the patience it probably took to paint the whole thing using tiny dots! I then pass out loupes and colored comics…

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The Artistic Side of Math – Spiral Geometry

The Artistic Side of Math – Spiral Geometry

Mathematics and nature often go hand-in-hand. In this lesson, students study the spirals of the nautilus and tie it in to a numerical sequence called the Fibonacci sequence. They use the sequence to re-design the nautilus using home-made compasses. I begin the lesson by showing the first few terms of the Fibonacci sequence and have students work together to see if they can figure out the pattern and the next few numbers in the sequence: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5,…

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The Artistic Side of Math – Scaling

The Artistic Side of Math – Scaling

Ancient Africans in Egypt enlarged pictures by using nets of squares. In this fun project, students re-construct a smaller picture into a very large picture. In mathematics, we call this dilation which is a type of trasformation studied in geometry. This is an activity I do with fourth graders and above. I first begin with a picture that I know the students will have fun re-constructing. Hence…Sponge Bob. Depending on the number of students who will be working on one…

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Using Individual White Boards in the Classroom

Using Individual White Boards in the Classroom

caption id=”attachment_1503″ align=”alignleft” width=”300″ caption=”First Graders practice writing equations”][/caption]Without a doubt, my absolute favorite teaching tool is the individual white board. Way back when the earth was still cooling and I had just started my teaching career, I laminated white poster board and cut them apart to make my own super cheap version. Today I have a little more money, so I have my own commercial set of 30. And they get used A LOT. Why do I like white…

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