Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Pizza!

As many of you know, the third and fourth grade classes order pizza each Friday. Children throughout the lower school put in their order; runners from the 3-4s pick up the orders and the money, determine the number of pizzas to buy, and hand-deliver it when it arrives.

Pizza is a major undertaking. There are times when we teachers wonder whether it is all worthwhile, especially when we discover that one class is short $15 or that a dozen or so children neglected to sign up until the pizza, you know, arrived... BUT we continue to do it because pizza a) tastes good, b) is convenient for parents, and c) IS A GREAT TOOL FOR PRACTICING MATH SKILLS. Of the three, c) is by far the most important in my book, though your mileage may vary.

How does pizza relate to mathematics? Glad you asked. Let us count the ways...

1. Pizza order takers get good practice in counting money and determining if it matches the number of slices ordered (hint: it does only about half the time).
2. Students get practice in giving and making change.
3. Students round the number of slices ordered per class to the nearest multiple of 10 to make estimation easier.
4. Kids practice addition skills by calculating the total number of slices ordered.
5. We look at number patterns. Hmmm: when a class orders 14 slices at $1.50 per slice, we get $21. Interestingly enough, 14 plus half-of-14 equals 21--the same number, only in regular numbers rather than in money. Now why would that be?
6. Especially later in the year, we use pizza as a real-life example of multiplication--if there are 8 slices per pizza, how many slices in 5 pizzas? In 7 pizzas? In 13 pizzas?
7. Kids calculate the profit for each week's worth of pizza: if we charge a dollar-fifty per slice after buying it for [sorry, trade secrets removed--suffice it to say "less"] per slice, how much money is left over? What operation can we use to calculate it?

And there are many other ways we mathicize pizza, especially this year, but I've been typing all day and my fingers are about to fall off. So you'll have to wait for another post. Sorry! In the meantime, how about some pictures? ...Yes, yes, the very thing!

Some of the proceeds, up close and personal:



This young man is clearly enjoying himself.
Think Scrooge McDuck.



Doublechecking that the amount of money from one of the 1-2 classes actually matches the number of slices ordered:



One of the "Grand Totalers," making bundles of ten for easier counting:



And at last, the fruits of our labors--or seven eighths of them at least (did I mention that pizza and FRACTIONS go well together? No? Consider it mentioned...):

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