Thursday, July 16, 2009

SummerMath, Part 3: The Bikepath, the Ballpark, and Beyond

My family went to the ballgame the other day, attracted by among other things a "Henry Hudson Bobblehead" giveaway (see picture). My son is quite eager to show off his Hudson Valley roots with this, um, iconic image when he heads west for his next college semester, and as for the rest of us, well, how could we pass up such a quality and historic freebie??

(Ol' Henry)

Anyhow, the game put me in my mind of Sports and Math. I spent most of my childhood free time engaged in one of five activities:

1) eating
2) reading the classics, mainly the Hardy Boys books
3) writing short stories with meandering plots and lots of unnecessary characters
4) playing board games and card games (see SummerMath Parts 1 and 2)
and
5) playing, watching, reading about, or thinking about baseball.

Baseball and math are closely linked, and in fact I learned quite a lot about math from my interest in baseball. My 1972 Sports Illustrated baseball board game (see 4 and 5 above) helped inform me about probability. I can remember the power I felt when I realized that I could use what (little) I knew about ratios to compare teams' won-lost records in my head--was it better to be 38-37 or 37-36, and how could I prove it? And I developed some facility with division, if not comprehension of WHY it worked, by virtue of calculating my batting average every day back when I was ten or so. (My batting average was very good. I counted it as a hit, of course, if someone muffed a ball I'd put in play. Or if the umpire mistakenly called me out when I was CLEARLY safe at first--don't laugh, it happened all the time. Or if I hit a line drive or a deep fly ball that somebody managed to corral, but which clearly SHOULD'VE been a hit--why should I be penalized just because my opponents had good hands? That was in addition to the occasional, you know, REAL hits I got. As I said, my batting average was very good.)

In any case, there are lots of ways to combine math with sports, for those of you whose children like to watch baseball, play soccer, ride bikes, or mess around with balls and such in the back yard after dinner. Here are some ideas of questions you can ask and projects you can do:

*Counting and estimating. "I wonder how many pitches the pitcher will throw this inning. Do you think it'll be more than 15 or less than 15?" "Take ten shots on goal from right here. Let's see how many go in...Now let's move you back a few feet. How many do you think will go into the net now?" "Good job! We just did 6 throws back and forth in a row without dropping a single one. Think we can beat that record? Let's keep track."

*Adding and subtracting, multiplying and dividing. "The scoreboard says the Renegades are winning 7 to 2. How many runs are they winning by?" "That's your third basket. Each basket is worth 2 points. How many points do you have so far?" I'll just add that I have taught many primary graders who could count rapidly by twos, fives, and tens when they came to my class, and a few who could rattle off threes, fours, and nines; but the only one I ever had who could count fluently by sevens was the one who lived and died with the NY Giants. Sevens...football...hmm!

*Measuring. "You sure hit that one a long way! I wonder how far it went.." You can measure with "nonstandard units," such as steps or rake lengths, which tends to be a little more meaningful for younger children, or with standard units--feet, yards, meters. "14 rake lengths--that's a lot. Whoa, that one went even further! Would you say 15, or 20, or even more?" How long does it take to run around the yard or the perimeter of the park? Time your child; let your child time you. Write it down. Try it again another day. Look at the map of one of the local bike paths. "It's 10 and a half miles long! How far do you think we'll get before I'll be ready to turn around?...I see another mileage marker up ahead--4 miles and still going!"

*Graphing. These take a little more time and energy, but they're great for kids who really love sports, especially team spectator sports. Work with your child to make a bar graph showing his or her favorite team's wins and losses.

(A sample bar graph)

Update it daily; use the internet or the newspaper to get the scores.






Or, make a line graph showing the number of runs your team scores on a daily basis. Look how the line moves around. What has the trend been? More runs over time, or fewer or about the same? How could you show the number of runs they gave up each day on the same graph?

(A sample line graph)

Can you make a graph showing how many times you go swimming/bicycling/hiking this month? We'll write the words down here; put up a blue sticker for the water whenever we swim, a red sticker for the color of your bike to show each time you go for a ride, a green sticker for the color of the leaves to stand for a hike.


(A sample picture graph)

Which has the most so far? The fewest? How many more bike rides have you taken than hikes?

Of course, I don't mean to reduce sports and physical activity to numbers. Nor is the point for kids to quantify their outside play. Be sure that timing and measuring are just for fun, a nice way of bringing a little math into children's lives, not an opportunity for frustration and embarrassment because they can't seem to beat their old record; be sure that a graph is a cute little add-on, not another chore that has to be done or the sole reason for taking a bike ride or going out for a hike. Sports are their own reward. Though, now that I think about, the ability to hit .658 (and calculate it properly!) might be its own reward, too...

No comments:

Post a Comment