Phase One
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How long is the carpet?
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How deep is the puddle?
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Teachers planned for the project by brainstorming major concepts and big ideas that they felt were essential for students to understand. These big ideas included:
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1. Most people measure in their daily lives. |
Teachers made a topic web of possible avenues of exploration that included activities, field trip sites, experts, resources, required curricular objectives and basic skills. Teachers used their topic web as a resource for the project investigation. They provided the materials and resources for students to find answers in their areas of interest.
In the classroom, the project began when children remembered the fall project entitled, Keeping our Environment Healthy. The children recalled that they took measurements when they collected data. They remembered weighing the litter from the playground and the nearby pond. They also remembered weighing the garbage generated at lunch at the beginning of the project and compared it to the weight of the garbage from their lunches at the end of the project.
The teacher recorded their recollections of their experiences with measurement on 'post-it' notes and began the Student Measurement Topic Web 1. In small groups, students revisited their ideas and explained them further to categorize them. The teacher helped students categorize their ideas by asking them to listen for similarities. The discussion of how their ideas were similar to others' enabled the teacher to note and document students' current understandings and misunderstandings.
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The teacher is telling children to categorize by similarities
(video).
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To encourage students to think further about their previous experiences with measurement, teachers shared personal stories. The head teacher described a special wall in her kitchen that recorded heights of all the family members. Several children told of their experiences with measuring. Children wrote and drew about their personal experiences.
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"My grandma measures me to make my clothes."
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"I am getting measured."
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Their pictures were photocopied and revisited so that students could form groups with peers who had similar experiences. The following conversation occurred during the sorting process of their memory drawings.
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NO: I drew my dad measuring a piece of wood so he could build my clubhouse. |
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Students discuss how to categorize their memory drawings.
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Graphic representation of their categories of their
memories about measurement.
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Students were curious about the experiences of their peers. Many students developed questionnaires to poll their classmates:
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KC: Have you been measured for making clothes? |
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Questionnaire asking classmates, "Have you measured
flour?"
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Pie graph showing the number of students who had and
had not measured flour.
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During large group discussion, several students mentioned problems they had while measuring something. The teacher asked students with similar problems to get together in small groups to discuss the difficulties they had measuring.
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Students discuss what is difficult about measuring solids.
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Students discuss what is difficult about measuring the
length of things.
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The comments from the group discussing solids included:
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WJ: It's hard measuring the depth of wood. |
One group discussed measuring the length, width and height of things.
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AC: Sometimes you need a big measuring ruler that's really tall. |
Another group discussed difficulties they had weighing things.
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KW: We couldn't weigh all the garbage. |
Another group discussed difficulties they had had in measuring liquids. These discussions helped students develop a fuller understanding of their experiences.
They drew pictures and made models of measuring devices with clay, Legos, rods, blocks and boxes and junk. During this phase as they recalled and explained, examined, defended and debated their experiences, questions arose. Teachers talked with individuals to clarify their questions and helped them to articulate what they wanted to know.
One student asked, "How do you measure the computer?" The teacher responded by asking for clarification, "What is it that you want to know about the computer? Do you want to know how tall the computer is? Or how heavy the computer is? Or how the computer can help you measure?" The student replied, "I want to know how tall is the computer?"
Another student asked, " How do you make measuring tape?" The teacher responded by asking him if he wanted to see how one worked or how to make one?" The student answered, "How do you make a measuring tape work?"
VM inquired, "How do you measure cars?" The teacher asked, "Do you want to know how long and how tall and how wide a car is to see if it will fit in a garage or what kind of measuring does a car tell the driver?" VM said he wanted to know what kind of measuring does a car tell a driver. For MW's question, "How far does the USA go," the teacher asked, " Do you want to know the longitude and latitude on a map or the area covered by the US?" MW said he wanted to know about longitude and latitude.
Teachers used the students' questions and their categories to form smaller study groups. Teachers grouped some individual questions under broader researchable questions.
Questions
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What tools are used for measuring? How do measuring tools work? What things get measured? How do you measure with measuring tools? Why do we measure? Who measures what in our neighborhood? |
The teachers guided the individual and small groups of students in researching their own questions. The entire class focused on the main question, "Who measures what in the neighborhood?"
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