Last Saturday was crazy! The mini-Maker Faire NC was a large, noisy, bright and exciting event. 6000 people of all ages spent 8 hours 3D printing, sewing wearable electronics bowties, creating music with a few carrots and a MakeyMakey kit, taking apart old printers, practicing sword fighting, and learning to tattle. And amidst all this excitement, right next to a giant marble run and across from a table with life-size puppets, was where we set up our little math house. It was a last-minute idea and a hasty run to the nearest home improvement store. We got some PVC pipes and fittings, plastic safety fence, and lots of ducttape and zip ties. Our little math house, when put together (which took about 15 minutes once PVC was cut to size), was just a bit sturdier than the stick house of the second little pig. It wouldn’t stand up to even the weakest of the Big Bad Wolves. It was time to strengthen it with lots and lots of math. We filled our little house with tools for building big mathematical ideas: weaving grids (check out our posts about weaving and math here, here and here), puzzles, geometric origami decorations, and photographs of beautiful math hidden in plain sight all around town (from Math Trek scavenger hunts). Still we were a bit worried. Would our little house even be noticed in all the excitement of the Faire? With over a hundred Maker displays, most of them hands-on, would the children want to come in and play for a few minutes? Most importantly, would our little house lead the adults to thinking about mathematics in their homes? Well, the house did get noticed and was played in. Kids spent a while there weaving, exploring puzzles, and playing with the balance scale. Adults looked at the photographs and talked to us about mathematics in their lives and in their homes. And now we’d like to continue this conversation.
So look around your house. What math do you see? What math that you see can your kids see, touch, make, and enjoy?
I am Moby Snoodles, and this is my newsletter. Send me your questions, comments, and stories of math adventures at moby@moebiusnoodles.com
Math You Make, Math You See
Do you think of math as something that “you have to solve”? Or perhaps as something that “you can play with”? How about math as something that “you want to see” or even something that “you can make”?
As we are getting ready for our first ever Maker Faire, we are thinking more and more about the DIY aspect of mathematics. Of course, there is no shortage of project ideas for DIY manipulatives that adults make and present to kids. What we’re doing with manipulatives is different:
Usability outside of math lesson – we often hear that math, as it is frequently presented to kids, is disconnected from the real life. One way to restore the connection is to create manipulatives that can be used in many contexts, for example, art pieces, objects to include in children’s play, things that enrich storytelling. Covariance Monsters by Bloke School
Child-friendly process – if you can’t make a manipulative together with the child, as part of the math exploration, then don’t make it at all.
Follow these two conditions, and the mathematical conversations that spark naturally, as you are making a manipulative, will lead to deep mathematical explorations. Which in turn leads to noticing more math in more places!
Camp Logic – First Chapter Unlocked, Blog Carnival Coming Up
There are just a few more days left until the end of the crowdfunding campaign for Camp Logic, the book that explores, in a playful way, logic and mathematical reasoning. Thank you, contributors!
Reaching our first crowdfunding milestone of $3000 meant that we could make the first chapter of the book available for you to review and comment on. If you haven’t checked it out yet, here’s the link to the chapter.
And now we’ve reached the second milestone with over $5000 raised. This means that in June we will hold a blog carnival at MoebiusNoodles.com It will be bursting with mathematical goodness – games, activities and mathematical art you can make with your children.
So what’s next? Reaching the $8000 milestone means we will hold a special Math Cafe with the book authors. You will be able to attend virtually or, if you are in New York City, in-person. Plus, for all pledges of $8 or more, you will also get electronic versions of the book. Pledges of $20 or more will get you a paper copy of the Camp Logic book. So don’t wait, contribute now.
Bored in a Math Class?
Okay, so this happens to all of us. We get bored. Bored in math or history or biology classes. Bored in meetings or on conference calls. How to deal with such boredom is the question we are exploring on the Ask forum. View boredom (whether your own, your child’s, or your student’s) not as a sign of personal failure, but as a call from your brain that it needs to do something creative, for example:
When I sat bored in a class (and not only in math class), one of my favorite games to play was the Knight’s Tour game. The way it was taught to me was on a 10×10 grid. But you can play on smaller (or larger) grids, like 5×5 or the traditional chessboard’s 8×8. By the way, you can play it on any rectangular grid, so don’t limit yourself to a square. So here we go:
Draw a grid
Pick your starting cell and write “1” in it
Move as a knight would move in chess and write “2” in the cell you land in.
Move again and this time write “3” in the cell you land on.
Continue until either you visit every single cell once and only once or until you cannot make another move.
This game will present many choices (apart from the size of the grid itself) – where to start, which way to move first, which way to move next, should you backtrack to the skipped cells? Play a few rounds, and some patterns start to emerge. The game itself is simple enough to be taught to young kids: you can reduce the grid dimensions, increase cell size, and use stickers instead of numbers to mark already-visited cells. But the math behind the game is not simple at all. Enjoy!
Sharing
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Talk to you soon!Moby Snoodles, aka Yelena McManaman
I am Moby Snoodles, and this is my newsletter. Send me your questions, comments, and stories of math adventures at moby@moebiusnoodles.com
Deep and playful mathematics for older kids
If you played through the Moebius Noodles book, participated in our multiplication course, or followed the Inspired by Calculus posts – and wished for playful and deep math like this, but for older kids – then I have great news for you! I am very happy to present Camp Logic by Mark Saul and Sian Zelbo, a book we will produce this year. I first met Mark at a conference of the National Association of Math Circles. Every Math Circle has a unique flavor; not all are compatible. I knew right away that Mark and I share many design principles and education values. In their math circles, Mark and Sian invite children to explore the underlying structure of mathematics through playful and informal tasks. And in Camp Logic, Mark and Sian share their art and craft with parents and teachers.
Camp Logic is a book for teachers, parents, math circle leaders, and anyone who nurtures the intellectual development of children. It is not necessary to have any mathematical background at all to use these activities – only to have a willingness to dig in and work toward solving problems where there is no clear path to a solution.
You can help us publish Camp Logic! Let your friends, colleagues, and the world know you want children to enjoy the underlying structures of math: share the campaign’s page on your sites, blogs, and social media. Join the crowdfunding event to contribute money for editing, printing, and distributing the book, and to field test the activities. The book will by published in 2014, under an open Creative Commons license.
Mark Saul and Sian Zelbo, authors
What parents and math circle leaders say
Sandy Papanek, a math circle parent: Congratulations, Sian and Mark! You have inspired so many children in our community. Now kids (and adults) all over the world will have access to your brilliant and exciting approach to math.
Ashley Ahlin, Michigan State University camp leader: I’m planning our summer math camps at MSU, and would love to use some of this material!
Amanda Serenevy, director of the Riverbend Community Math Center: I look forward to using this book with our students!
Kathy MacGovan, a math circle parent: Sian gave my daughter the gift of Math! A girl who was not sure about it was transformed into a confident, excited, inventive student. May her book inspire hundreds of children in the same way. Congratulations Sian!
Chapter preview unlocked for everyone
The draft of the book is already written, discussed with experienced math circle leaders, and illustrated. We are conducting broader beta testing during this crowdfunding campaign. Contributors have a chance to give their feedback for all parts of the manuscript. The campaign reached its first milestone within two days of its start, and now preview and commenting on the first chapter is open for the general public.
Read about Mark and Sian, see the chapter, and learn more about the book at the campaign’s page.
Sharing
You are welcome to share the contents of this newsletter online or in print.
Talk to you soon!Moby Snoodles, aka Dr. Maria Droujkova
Parents often ask how to help kids do math projects without upsetting the kids, taking over, or otherwise breaking the flow.
“Every time I correct my child’s mistake she starts crying.”
“We started to build a model, but as soon as I helped, my son stopped working!”
Our recipe is simple. It is similar to the advice, “Don’t answer questions nobody asked.” Be co-workers, doing separate projects side by side. Do what you want – on your side, on your project. And help kids do what they want, on theirs. Don’t impose your wishes on children’s projects.
Help kids do what they want.
Ask kids to help you do what you want.
Don’t help kids do what you want.
I mean, would you want someone to help you do something that person wants, not you? Exactly!