« Standarized Testing in Kindergarten? :: Hurricane in a Bottle »Author: Lori Stewart
Categories: Middle School, Math
Great estimators are made, not born. The most practice your child gets with making estimations about the world around her, the better she'll be when it comes time to keep her math calculations in the right ballpark. Here's an activity to make your child an estimation master.
Enrico Fermi was a twentieth-century, Nobel Prize winning Physicist known for his ability to rapidly estimate calculations in his head. “Fermi Questions” emphasize determining an answer on the correct order of magnitude instead of a specific number. The goal of answering a “Fermi Question” is to make rough, educated estimates at each step of the problem and come up with a reasonable estimate to the problem. For example:
1. Fermi Question – How many pet cats are there in the U.S.?
2. Fermi Solution – There are about 300 million U.S. citizens. Most households have more than one person, let’s estimate 3 people/house or 100 million households in the U.S. I would guess 1 in 4 house holds have cats so about 25 million households have cats. Typically people have more than one cat, let’s say 2, so there are about 25 million x 2 or 50 million pet cats in the U.S.
3. Explanation – Of course you may have chosen different numbers, but in the end the answer should be on the same order of magnitude (5,000 would be too low and 5 billion would be too high!).
What You Do:
READ MORE http://www.education.com/activity/article/Fermi_middle/
No Comments for this post yet...
Comments are not allowed from anonymous visitors.
In 1999, Jan Van Blarcum, Ph.D. founded Creative Tutors. As an educator, Dr. Van Blarcum understood the importance of personalized attention in a child's educational growth. Her passion for learning grew into a business endeavor that provides customized, one-on-one, in-home tutoring to children with a variety of learning needs. Every child receives personalized attention from certified/degreed educators. Jan has acquired invaluable experience through living abroad, teaching in many educational environments and has acquired business development experience. These unique experiences, coupled with her fervent desire to provide all children with the tools needed to achieve their potential in today's educational environment, led her to establish Creative Tutors and their sister organization Creative Learning 4 Kids, Inc. a 501(c)(3) company.
"The great thing about learning is that no one can take it away from you." B.B. King