Pi Day 2018

Happy Pi Day!!!  So this was my FIRST Pi day with students as in past years we were usually on Spring Break.  But I can tell you it was EPIC!!  I hope this will inspire you to plan your own Pi Day!

If you want to get kids excited, you need engagement.  I ran Pi Day two different ways at two different schools.  Here are all of the details and resources!

Two Months before Pi Day, the math teacher and I announced our first annual “Pi Bee”.  The person to memorize and recite the most digits of Pi accurately would win a prize.

One Month before Pi Day, I asked local pizza places for donations for the big event.  Mod Pizza in Wentzville donated $25 in gift cards for the winners.

I confirmed where we could hold the pi day in the school building and the time.

Two weeks before Pi day, I collected Pie Face games from parents and staff.  I purchased a white crazy scientist wig and lab coat from Amazon.  I plan to use them in my STEM Camp this summer as well, so I think it was a worthwhile investment.  The wig was surprisingly good for the price however it is on the small side.  The coat is a normal fit – so if you are normally a medium then get that size.

I also had parents sign up to bring in whipped cream, plates and gummy bears.  We had extra gummy bears and will use them throughout the year.  I asked a couple of parents to help set up as well.  This was a big help at the beginning and end of the event.

I asked the art teacher if I could borrow a class set of markers or colored pencils.

I purchased and collected and copied additional materials for Pi Day.  I had decorations and activities from last year.  This year I added on a few more stations.

I printed and laminated Pi Day Decorations in preparation for the big day.  These are my favorite – and FREE!

I collected string, rulers, cans, tubes, yogurt cups and anything else round for Pi Investigation Station.  I would advise NOT using paper with circles drawn on them.  It is very difficult and cumbersome.  It is simpler to keep your toilet paper tubes!

I asked any staff members free during first hour to come and join the pi day fun.  They would also get their faces full of pie 🙂

Activities I used included:

Pi Day Art Poster – this station has the students coloring different posters which will form one large poster.

Pi Bee Certificate and Stations – This set included a pi bee certificate which I gave to each of the winners.  I work at two different schools, so I had two 1st place winners.  There are activities I used as well.

Pi Day Word Station – I included various word searches that I found online.

More Pi Day Actvities for Stations:

No Prep Pi Day Activities: Includes another word search

Graphing and Coloring:  includes a bar graph activity and art activity

Poster:  Free poster

Pi Day Extensions:

For my gifted education class, I used a Pi Day breakout where the students had to solve puzzles and use pi to figure out the locks.  All of the materials are in the shared folder here.

Pi Day Breakout

The Day is Here!!!

Pi Day finally had arrived!  Here is how our day went so you can have your own pi day too!

  1.  Pi Day Slideshow
  2. Introduced Albert Einstein and who he was and why the day was so special.  Introduced what pi actually is and had it up on the large projector.
  3. Pie Contest!!  This can go first or last.  We had paper plates with one gummy bear in each.  Then the plates were covered in whipped cream.  The staff members and I had to find the gummy bear and show everyone first – withOUT using your hands!!
  4. Pi Bee – contestants came up and gave the digits of pi.  This part will go by much faster than you think!  I had two of us judging so it would be fair in case there was a close call.
  5. The pi bee winner was announced and given his or her certificate and prize.
  6. Explained the stations.  The pi bee contestants had to do a lot of hard work – so they were allowed to do a little bit of the stations and played the pie face game the rest of the time.
  7. We switched between stations every 10-15 minutes.
  8. The end!  Some students helped clean up and we were good to go!

That was it!  We all had a blast – now go start planning for Pi Day!

Solar Eclipse 2017 – Activities and Resources

Wow!  Of all the years to return back to teaching!  We will view a solar eclipse on the THIRD day of school.  How amazing is that???  I am SO excited about the solar eclipse.  It brings me back to elementary school days and writing reports on the planets and high school when I would tape “Star Trek: The Next Generation” to watch it later.  (I will explain what a “tape” is to you youngin’s in another post!)

I decided to make each day up to the eclipse all about solar activities!  For the first day, we will make Solar Ovens.  Then, we will take them outside and put together our s’mores powered by the sun!

#1

To Make Solar S’mores:

You will need: marshmallows, graham crackers, milk chocolate (the Hershey plain bar is peanut free unless they have changed it, foil and a cardboard box, glue or tape, clear plastic wrap, ruler and black construction paper

Optional but fun: a thermometer to see how hot the solar oven gets.

Steven Spangler does a great video on how- to.  I read it will take about 30 minutes to melt the marshmallows.

You can variations of the solar oven and see which works best.  Black paper?  White paper?  Foil? A large box?  A small box?

You can discuss the greenhouse effect and how it relates to your own home just like the solar oven.

#2

Astronomy Magazine has published a couple of articles on the Solar Eclipse that are super interesting.  “19 Big Eclipse Surprises” by Michael Bakich is in the July 2017 issue.  “Solar Eclipse Geometry” is in the May 2017 issue.

25 Facts about the Eclipse in Astronomy Magazine

Students can take parts of these articles and summarize them using Jigsaw.

#3

NASA has put together a 44 page Activity Guide full of ideas here.

 

#4

(Image source: Amazon)

The librarians in our district published a book about the eclipse!  You can purchase it on Amazon here.  It has ALL 5 star reviews and written FOR elementary students by two librarians who work in an elementary school in Missouri.

#5 – Pinhole Viewer

Make a pinhole camera to view the eclipse.

Here is another set of directions using a cereal box!

 

#6

When discussing circles, you can always count on pi.  Especially lemon meringue.

The Jet Propulsion Lab has a lesson on pi with reference to the eclipse and pi.  We have all seen the map of the solar eclipse path – but how did scientists figure that out?  The JPL has this math illustrated in #4 of their “Pi in the Sky” lesson series.

Pi in the Sky 4

#7

NASA Downloadable Activities

#8

Department of Natural Resources – Download Lessons and Activities

#9

NASA Eclipse Kit

#10

Great tips!!

These are great tips for viewing the eclipse if you are in the viewing area like I am.  Bathroom break – GREAT tip.  You don’t want you and/or your students to miss this!

As a photographer, I particularly find #24 and #25 quite funny!  But seriously, I did research photographing the eclipse and came to the conclusion – just don’t.

New Blog!

This is my new website to post items related to Gifted and STEM Education that are interesting to the world at large.

For our final week of class, our students were introduced to a new STEM Project.  Our city is looking at building a new water park.  The water park will need a wicked fast water slide!  Your job is to create a water slide with 3 twists or turns, is at least 10″ high and no more than 18″.  With limited amount of materials, here is what some students created to send 6 “people” down the water slide.  We made sure all of our “people” signed waivers that we are not liable for their safety.  🙂