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What’s the BIG Idea?. Introducing Math & Science Concepts to Young Patrons Beth Rosania Jenny Grenfell PNLA 2010, Victoria , British Columbia. What math or science concept did you use in your last children’s program?. What we want to ask ourselves.
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What’s the BIG Idea? Introducing Math & Science Concepts to Young Patrons Beth Rosania Jenny Grenfell PNLA 2010, Victoria , British Columbia
What math or science concept did you use in your last children’s program?
What we want to ask ourselves • Is this a meaningful activity for children? • Am I helping them make sense of their world?
Expectations • Infusing our preschool activities with science and math content, skills, and processes • Seeing what we already do through a different lens
History of BIG Idea • Mother Goose Programs – Vermont Center for the Book • Adaptable to multiple age groups • Piloted three years in three library systems
3 focus areas • More Than Counting • Patterns and Relationships • Shapes and Spaces
More Than Counting Numbers and Operations
Goals and Key Concepts Goal: Children will explore numbers and operations, while developing their math skills, concepts and vocabulary Key Concepts: • relationships between numbers and things • relationships between numbers • measuring • estimation
Counting Vocabulary • one-to-one correspondence • cardinal number • ordinal number • part-part-whole • set • numeral
4 8 2 3 5 What Happens When Children Explore Numbers? 3 6-3 7 4 6 15 7 8 1 1 3 5 + 1 8 9
Counting • one-to-one correspondence • count to five • count & represent numbers with objects • numerical order • use numbers to collect & represent data
Sets • sorting • matching • part-part-whole - sets - addition - making number sentences
Measurement • measuring length • measuring weight • standard units • non-standard units • estimation
More Than Counting: A Typical Program • What’s Needed • Opening • Books • Fingerplays/Songs • Activity
Patterns and Relationships Patterns, Relationships, and Changes over Time
Goals and Key Concepts • Goal: to lay groundwork for general math and science skills • Key Concepts: patterns and relationships that underlie all math and science • Children learn this best hands-on
4 Major Areas • Finding Patterns • Recognizing Relationships • Change Over Time: Growth • Change Over Time: Weather
Patterns • Recognition • Continuation • Variation • Creation
Relationships • Attributes • Comparison • Sorting • Sequences
Growth • Of kids, plants, animals, etc. • Any change over time
Weather • Very easy to integrate into existing programming
Spaces and Shapes Geometry for Young Children
Goals and Key Concepts • Goal: to lay groundwork for geometry • Key Concepts: positional words, measurement, classification, shapes, sizes, relationships
Three Areas of Geometry for Children Exploring Shapes Spaces and Places Building and Construction
Exploring Shapes • Name that Shape (What the heck is a “rhombus”?) • What makes me a circle and you a triangle? (Attributes and Comparisons) • Sorting, Combining, Exploring (Quilts, Symmetry, Tangrams)
Spaces and Places • Location! Location! Location! • Let’s Stop & Get Directions • Are We There Yet?
Building and Construction • What children learn as they build • How can that happen?
Spaces and Shapes: A Typical Program • What’s Needed • Opening • Books • Fingerplays/Songs • Activity
You can do it ! How can you insert these concepts into activities you already have planned? What will work for you?
Conclusions and Ideas Feel free to share any ideas YOU’VE come up with along the way!