The Circle
by Andrea Rogers and Jessica Wesaquate
Strand:
Shape and Space
Grade Level:
Primary
Related Lessons:
"Shape" and "Felt Activity:
Exploring Shape"
Objectives:
Students will be able to explore circular
items in both indoor and outdoor environments.
Students will be
able to use recycled items to create a circle on their paper.
Students will be able to discover the definition of a circle through this activity.
Materials:
circular everyday items (examples found
below), paper, pencils, rulers,
tipi raising video clip
Using everyday circular items teaches students to re-use man-made items.
Recommended video
clip
for this activity:
Video Eight. You may want to pause the clip
or support the lesson with photographs.
The tipi is composed of several shapes (see lesson titled "felt
activity"). You will notice that the base of the tipi is circular.
Have students explore the concept of the circle. You can introduce the
topic by having students look around the room to spot out any circular
items. When they are out on the playground have them search for circular
shapes in their environment.
Activity:
Have students bring a circular item from
home, such as old lids from yogurt, margarine, or coffee tins. In their
math journals, or duo-tangs, have students record as many characteristics
as they can about their item. After they have completed this, have them
trace their circular shape on white paper using their pencils.
Explore:
As the students will observe in the video-clips,
there are eleven poles around the tipi. The other two poles are used
for the wind flaps. Have the students make eleven dots around their circle.
Using their rulers, have students find the centre of their circle and
mark it in with their pencil. Now have them draw lines from their eleven
dots around the circle to the centre point. Using their rulers, have
students measure each line and record the measurements. What do they
observe? Have them share their observations with a partner.
Discuss with your students what the formal definition of a circle is.
Informally the students have discovered the definition of a circle through
this activity. Recall with the students what they have learned in today's
lesson, by having a classroom discussion or having them record the things
they learned in their math logs or in an exit note.
Aboriginal Perspectives is supported by the University of Regina, the
Imperial Oil Foundation, the Canadian Mathematical Society and the
Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences.
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