Marie: Leading Math Circles at 10?

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Marie's Club

My name is Marie, and I am ten years old. Since I was six years old, I have attended a math circle. Last year I started to help out with the class for little kids. This year, I decided that I could start teaching a math circle on my own. Now, I am teaching a Pre-K math circle for little kids that are about four or five years old. The kids are used to me now, and I am really enjoying the teaching experience.

This is what I observed during one of the classes; it’s very funny. When I told the kids that the problem they were solving was a game, even if it was a just an ordinary problem, the kids started getting much more involved in it, because they thought that they weren’t actually solving a problem, but that they were playing a game! An example of when this happened was when we were using the board and pieces of the game, “Othello” (we weren’t actually playing the game though). The kids were reluctantly solving geometric problems using Othello pieces, until I told them that we were playing a game. “A game? Let’s play!” yelled the kids, excitedly going back to the exact same problems they were solving before.

Kids are much more involved in the class when:

  1. The problems involve them
  2. They get to choose what the problems are about, or at least change the details of the problems
  3. The problems involve real-life situations, especially if they have to do with their life
  4. The problem has a fairy tale, or some other kind of story woven into it.

For example, when the class was doing Venn diagrams, I made the diagrams about who in the class had sisters, brothers, or both. The kids were delighted with the very idea that they would be inside a mathematical problem!

I observed that warm-ups and easy problems that kids can solve on their own, correctly, help the kids relax and build more confidence in themselves, when encountering harder problems later in the lesson. Discussions and introductory examples to the topic are a good way to start a lesson. DO NOT start a lesson with a game! Kids will lose their attention, become over-excited, and be unable to return to the topic.

Teaching a math circle turned out being much more fun and interesting than I expected. I enjoy listening to the kids’ ideas and thoughts, and observing how they react. The kids consider me adult enough that they listen to me, but they see that I am still a child, so they are not afraid to share their ideas, and make mistakes.

If you would like to see the lessons of the math circle, and more details, please visit my blog at:

http://trickyprekmath.blogspot.com/

Thank you.

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Posted in Grow
0 comments on “Marie: Leading Math Circles at 10?
    2 Pings/Trackbacks for "Marie: Leading Math Circles at 10?"
    1. […] Moebius Noodles (http://www.moebiusnoodles.com/). This site is by educators who are interested in early math experiences. They have a book coming out soon, and if you are interested in students teaching students, check out this post by a ten-year-old who runs a math club for pre-K students: http://www.moebiusnoodles.com/2013/02/marie-leading-math-circles-at-10/ […]

    2. […] for preschooler’s, and it boggles my mind that her blog is so well-written at her age.  Here is a link to the post that led me to her blog.  I would highly recommend reading it.  This ten year-old, […]

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