Summary
The title of the book is Christopher Counting, written by Valeri
Gorbachev.
The story starts where Christopher
Rabbit sitting in class while his professor was teaching the class counting 1
to 10. Then after Christopher left school he started to count everything he
sees on his way, the story shows how much Christopher loves counting. Ever
since he learned to count at school, he counts everything. He counts everything
in his backpack; he counts everything in the house; he counts steps as he walks
downstairs; he counts times of the stone skipping on the water; he counts when
he plays hide-and-seek with other friends. Finally when it is time to bed,
Christopher is so exhausted because of counting all day. Before he is urged to
bed by his mother, he suddenly remembers he forgets to count something --
STARS! When Christopher sits on the front porch and counts the stars in the
sky, he finally realizes that it is impossible to count everything!
I don’t have enough knowledge on books for children. So, I chose
it based on the title and after I read the story I found how much I can relate
math to a simple story like Christopher Counting.
Ways in which it relates to Math
Input/Output
Geometry
Parabola
Calculus/Leibniz
The story starts with a classroom
having 8 students, one of them is Christopher the rabbit. All were sitting on
their desks, each desk was a rectangular shaped having (length * width) and 4 angles. Ms. Goat was
teaching the students how to count through a basket of oranges demonstration.
The input here is Ms. Goat who was giving new information/numbers and how they
should be counted for her students. The output was every student who was
repeating after her the numbers. Christopher rabbit loved the new topic he learned
counting from 1 to 10. He left school counting everything he sees. His cubic
shaped aquarium of fish that has 8 vertices/ corners, 12 edges and 6 faces/sides,
and circle shaped plates with radius, diameter. All his stuff were counted!
Then Christopher Rabbit decided to
discover the outside and see what he can count there, he went to a close by
lake and saw Beaver throwing stones into the lake. The picture shows how Beaver
was making continues parabola with circular waves; the wave has 3 dimensions.
So, all the parabolas Beaver
created were facing down because in our quadratic function
ax² + bx + c if a < 0 then the parabola opens down.
Finally,
Christopher rabbit decides to leave Beaver and go somewhere else to count everything!
Before he went to bed he decided
to count the stars, and he gave up and started crying because he found out that
counting the stars was just impossible. That’s what we call infinity – after I
searched for it I saw a familiar name from our class, Leibniz, was the
co-inventor of infinitesimal calculus. “To Leibniz, both infinitesimals and infinite
quantities were ideal entities, not of the same nature as appreciable
quantities, but enjoying the same properties” Wikipeda
Infinity in limits where something doesn’t have limits ∞. For example, the set of integers
is countably
infinite, while the infinite set of real numbers is uncountable.
Why is literature an
effective way to teach/learn a mathematical concept?
I do believe that literature makes
things easier like math. Instead of working with numbers, we apply math to
stories or we extract math from the story. It does make a difficult concept
more understandable in an easy way. Also, it makes math fun for all ages especially
kids since I did go through a child’s book having no clue I would find one
thing related to math.
So, in my opinion literature has a
good effect on teaching and a faster way for understanding.
If we get functions, formulas and math concepts out of simple
stories like Christopher Counting then math shouldn’t be a nightmare for most kids
=)


This story kind of reminds of the idea of functional cardinality, which is something we deal with a lot when using math to answer strange questions. Infitismalism is something I work with a lot in my research, and I know that counting large amounts of numbers is hard and annoying. But this book seems cute so I may just check it out.
ReplyDeletei am glad to hear that you might check out this book, grant.
DeleteQuite interesting! Never really thought about children's books as being teaching tools!
ReplyDeletedahlia,
ReplyDeletei can tell that you put a lot of thought and research into your work for this assignment. i absolutely LOVE that you were able to take this simple text and find subtlely imbedded precalc and calc concepts (i.e. liebniz and parabolas). and great explanation of these concepts, by the way.
fantastic job!
professor little