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KEVIN!
That night he actually broke the things that hold the tuning keys and guitar strings onto his guitar off. :| RIP Kevin's guitar.
MC Frontalot, Math the Band, Brandon Patton, and Weird Die Young show @ the Middle East Upstairs in Cambridge, MA.
Every year, on the 100th day of school, is Math Night. Math Night is when you go to your classroom, and give a math or geometry mini presentation to parents that come to visit. Some examples are Test Tube Division, How to Make a Polynomial of Your Name, and Make a Nautilus. The work that I did was The Powers of Three and How to Make it Into a Chart. If you want to see more pictures and an explanation about this, go here. In the Lower Elementary classrooms, you make a 100 project, by collecting 100 things - anything - and then writing a piece on why you chose it, how you made it, etc… Usually the 3rd graders do 1000 projects. When I was in 1st Grade, I took 100 goldfish and put them into 10 lunchbaggys. In 3rd Grade, I took 1000 used stamps from all over the world and pasted them onto a board. We still have it!
More than 30 elementary students in kindergarten through second grade recently explored math through art, physical activity and music as part of BU’s annual Math Camp, which also helped participating education majors learn fundamental themes for math learners.
It’s a collaborative benefit, according to Frank D’Angelo, assistant professor of early childhood and adolescent education, who says through the math camp BU’s education program is helping local elementary students get ready for the new school year. bloomu.edu/news-math-camp
The cogs mean my brain is working and the diamond means I am very happy because its maths.
Robert Age 9
Find out the definition, examples and unlimited fun math problems related with Experiment for kids at
(math sign experiment, line AB)
I wish someone with some real decorating talent would take this idea and make it as cute as it is in my head. It seems like it could be a fun/educational project to do with kids. My kids have fur and tails, so my lack of skill doesn't effect them. I actually did one with the entire quadratic equation written across it...but...it didn't turn out too hot :-)
Janet Moore of Illinois State University recently lead a workshop in Classroom Intelligent Adventure (CIA) Missions at College of DuPage for a group of local STEM teachers. The missions challenge your students to complete a series of puzzles in order to crack the code to unlock the box and save the day. Working as CIA agents, students use classroom concepts based in the STEM disciplines, along with teamwork and problem-solving skills, to complete their mission successfully. The CIA workshop provided teachers experience with several examples of STEM-focused CIA Mission puzzles and instruction on designing their own CIA Mission puzzle