Once Upon a Dime: A
Math Adventure by Nancy Kelley Allen is about a farmer, Truman Worth, who
is always happy to do his work and chores and be around his farm animals. He
grows crops such as apples and beans, but he only uses natural fertilizer from
his animals. One year Farmer Worth decides to use fertilizer from chicken
droppings to which he finds that pennies have grown. The following year he uses
Pig Squish as his fertilizer and in the following spring nickels grow from the
tree. Next fall Farmer Worth uses sheep biscuits as his fertilizer and then
dimes blossom from the tree in the spring. He continues using fertilizes from
different animals, such as cow manure that then produces quarters and then bull
chips that produced dollar bills. Farmer worth then uses panda patties and
Yuan, Chinese money, is grown.
This book demonstrates the concept of input and output.
Every year Farmer Worth uses different fertilizers from different animals, and
every different fertilizer produces different values of money. This represents
input and output because of the unique money value that is grown from different
fertilizers. For every animal dropping, x in this case, that he uses results in
a specific monetary value, y.
Literature is an effective way to learn or teach mathematical
concepts because in a sense it gives a “real life” example of a concept in
which children or adults can easily understand and connect the two. Illustrations
and words can be very beneficial when learning math since you are not
necessarily focusing only on the math concept and can relate with the example or
story given.
lian,
ReplyDeletei like that you included the fact that adults can also more easily learn math concepts through literature. also, great job of explaining in detail the input/output concept using x and y. =)
professor little