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Math
Lesson
for Banana Day
Objective:
The
students will measure the curved length of bananas.
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Materials
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Cloth
measuring tapes (or pieces of string and hard rulers)
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Bananas (or
cutout shapes of bananas) numbered 1-12 (or with the
numbers you need so each pair of students has a
banana)
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Banana
Measurement Worksheets for results.
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Procedure
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Show
the students a banana and brainstorm how to measure
it. Discuss how a hard ruler would not be able
to account for the curve in the banana. You may
demonstrate this by holding up your index finger and
asking if you curve your finger whether the length is
changed. Show how to measure a curved banana
either using a measuring tape or a piece of
string marked off and held up to a hard ruler.
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Put
the students in pairs. Give each pair a banana
(or banana cutout), a measuring tape (or a piece of
string and a hard ruler), and a worksheet.
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Have
the students measure their banana and record their
results. They will then want to exchange their
banana with at least 2 other pairs, so they measure a
total of 3 bananas.
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Have
the students measure at least 3 other items in the
classroom, either straight or curved, of their choice.
Wrap
Up:
Have the students think of other larger items that are
curved which people may measure, i.e. roads, a race
track, playground slides, a monkey's tail.
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Other
Lesson Ideas
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Weigh
bananas on a scale.
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Make
up lists of items in the classroom that are bigger or
smaller than bananas.
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Using
the basis of the "5 a Day for Better Health"
slogan, practice counting by 5's to see how many
servings of fruits and vegetables should be eaten for
any given number of days.
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Add
the number of bananas in different bunches to get a
total.
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