Wheres Beef Presentation Math Project

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This is an explanation of a math writing project I do with my 7th grade students in which they discover ways of describing everyday objects in mathematical terms.

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Glenn Kenyon        The San Francisco School           glenkenyon@yahoo.com

where’s the math?describing the math in everyday things

Agenda•mathematics as culture

•what are cultural artifacts?

•how about neckties? (sample)

• the ubiquitous hamburger (group)

•other artifacts (individual)

You will leave this workshop seeing math in EVERYTHING and have concrete

ideas to bring this out in student writing.

The San Francisco School. 50% students of color. 50% from public elementary schools. 40% on scholarships.

48% of my life as an educator

Who Am I?

about 4,100 days with students or

about 25,000 hours

Math specialist for 18%

of professional life

bilingual teacher for 82%

28% in kinder/first,

54% in 4/5 18% in Middle School

I’ve worked with a little over 1,800 students and their families

Text

For you personally, Math is primarily 

an art,  a language, a science, 

a tool, a way of life, 

a distant memory, 

a nightmare, 

or something else entirely?

An exquisite expression

of human culture.

For me math is primarily:

What is a cultural artifact?

Culture is how you live your life

What are the objects you possess that help “live your life”?

So cultural artifacts are what you use to live and think

Make a list of your own personal cultural items that

you could potentially describe mathematically.

Feel free to take risks(You won’t be obliged to pick an artifact from your list)

My cultural artifact: The Necktie

DescriptionA necktie is a long piece of fabric, often silk, that is worn around the neck and hangs down along the center of the torso. It is tied in a specific triangular knot around the neck and often is tucked underneath the shirt collar. It is typically worn by men in formal situations, although women can also wear them.

RationaleI chose this artifact because it represents a dilemma I face as a Californian and as a teacher. I personally like neckties because they can be fun and colorful in an otherwise boring male wardrobe. At the same time, it can be uncomfortable to wear something close around the neck, especially when buttoning up the dress shirt. As a Californian I have been in very few situations where a tie was mandatory. As a teacher I have always worked at schools where ties are considered SUSPECT. But as a person, I like wearing ties on a regular basis. Hence, I chose the NECKTIE a my cultural artifact.

Pick a couple of math topics from each section to describe your artifact

the math behind a necktienumber

proportionality

measurement/geometry

algebra

what fraction of my tie is red?convert this fraction into decimals?

what percentage of my tie has numbers?what is the ratio of numbers and letters on my tie?

what are the dimensions of my tie in inches and centimeters?how much material was used to make my tie?

what is the approximate area of the trapezoid knot?how can i convert my measures from inches to cm?

the math behind a necktie

Fermi QuestionOn a given work day, about how many ties are worn in California?

• California population: about 36 million• Maybe half live in urban settings: 18 million• Maybe half of those are adults: 9 million• About half of the adults are men: 4.5 to 5 million• Ties are worn in certain professions on regular basis, but many jobs don’t require them• I estimate that between 10% and 25% of working men wear ties: 10% of 5 million: 500,000 to 25% of 5 million: 1.25 million

• I believe the number of necktie wearers on a given day in California is between 0.5 and 1 million,

a very small percentage of the entire California population.

the math behind the hamburger

the math behind the hamburger

With a partner, generate some questions/answers that lead to a mathematical description of a hamburger.

Your task:

Use the resources provided and/or other info.

You will be sharing your work with the group

Think of a FERMI QUESTION for a hamburger

the math behind the hamburger

the math behind other artifacts:

or anything else you have with you

Generate a math description of one of these artifacts:

looking @ student work

workshop evaluation

resources

( http://www.nctm.org/eresources/article_summary.asp?URI=MTMS2008-12-280a )

Fermi Questions in the middle school

http://nutrition.mcdonalds.com/nutritionexchange/nutrition_facts.html

http://www.in-n-out.com/pdf/nutrition_2008.pdf

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