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Math is no longer the 'Big Bad Wolf'
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Who says Little Red Riding Hood has nothing to do with math?
Certainly
not George Gadanidis, whose research at The University of Western Ontario
reimagines the fairytale classic to make mathematics fun and accessible for
both kids and parents alike – while attempting to dismiss the notion math is
akin to the ‘Big Bad Wolf.’
The
version he and his daughter Molly perform explores concepts related to
shapes and even and odd numbers, while addressing the subtext of parents who
scare their children away from math, based on their own prior negative
experiences.
As a
professor in Western’s Faculty of Education, Gadanidis and his colleagues have
long worked to “break the negative cycle of math” by using song, dance and
theatre to show how the manipulation and understanding of numbers can be fun.
In the process, they hope to encourage people to discuss math problems as they
would a book or a movie, and to break down math stigmas that have been
perpetuated over generations.
“We’ve
all heard children come home from school and answer ‘nothing’ when asked what
they learned in math that day,” says Gadanidis. “We hope to begin to change
that.”
He is
also capitalizing on the emergence of new media, including YouTube, to spread
positive messages about mathematics, while providing parents with an
interactive framework for working through math equations with their children,
and for breaking down communication barriers related to their education.
“We’re
using JoyofX.com to start building research performances, so we’re publicly
performing our research data, which is a unique thing,” says Gadanidis. “This
way, scholarly work is accessible to everyone and creates models teachers can
use, which bridges the practical and the theoretical.”
At the
end of the day, he hopes to get parents, teachers and children talking about
what they are learning in mathematics – in a positive manner, and without the
generations-old stereotypes – by scripting lyrics that encourage such
discussion, including:
‘I
learned that even numbers/They hide in a rectangle…They play hide-and-seek/Take
a look or take a peek/Bet you didn’t know that even numbers/Hide in a
rectangle.’
These
songs are often accompanied by exercises that use materials like linking tubes
or chocolate bars that reinforce the concepts of performing math ideas to
parents.
“Young
kids love to perform, especially when it’s something worth performing,” he says.
In the
process, Gadanidis hopes to begin to change the impression of math from the
public end, creating change in the classroom that leads to changes at home.
“Province-wide
testing creates stress for Grade 3 students, but teachers want the students to
do well, so they’re willing to experiment,” he says. “This project focuses on
big math ideas and communication skills.”
The
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)-funded project is
heavily inter- and cross-disciplinary, often integrating partnerships with
writers and poets, mathematicians, scientists and other educators across the
country and around the world.
Go to
the Math Performance Centre for additional information, including many videos
of math performances.
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