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Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Lemonade for Sale


Lemonade for Sale by Stuart J. Murphy

Lemonade for sale is a story about 4 kids that live on elm street who entertain their selves with a club house (decorated hammock), that happened to be falling apart, so they wanted to repair it. After realizing that they have no money left in their piggy bank, one of the children, Danny, suggests that they make 30-40 cups of lemonade to accumulate money for the their broken down club house. Sherry suggests that they keep track of sales via a bar graph. On Monday they sold 30 cups, 40 cups on Tuesday, 56 cups on Wednesday, 24 cups on Thursday, and more than 90 cups on Friday. On Thursday they realized that a new neighbor was taking their customers by juggling on the corner. They invited the juggler to juggle by the lemonade stand and sales skyrocketed on the graph, which allowed the kids to have enough money for their clubhouse. Hooray!
 Lemonade for sale does a great job at depicting how to graph data. The book didn’t explain independent and dependent variables, but if there was a mathematical lesson based off of the book, one could show children that the days listed at the bottom of the bar graph were the independent variables and the cups sold, on the y-axis, were the dependent variable. I think the book made a good choice by choosing a bar graph to the plot the information, since bar graphs are the easiest. However, the author could have decided to plot the data with a scatter plot.
Literature is a great way to teach mathematical concepts because it visually depicts the mathematical scenario. In my opinion having a visual example of a math problem helps me recall definitions and concepts better. Also, kids will enjoy learning if the learning process is engaging and fun. Involving literature with pictures is a great way to contingently appeal to a diverse pool of needs.

1 comment:

  1. yasmine,

    i LOVE that you identified the fact that the story didn't deal with introducing the concept of inputs and outputs but that this could be a spin off lesson using this text. excellent observation. are you sure you don't want to become an educator? ;)

    i also like that you included the benefits of visual representations in your own learning.

    professor little

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