Students measure up
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Suzie Harrison
Give them an inch and they’ll take a mile, especially if they’re
using the wrong unit of measurement.
Paula Pitts’ third-graders at El Morro Elementary School got a
lesson in standard units of measurement, as well as a lesson in how
the rest of the world measures up.
“How are Americans different than most of the world?” Pitts asked.
“We’re renegades in the sense that the whole world would love the
same system of measurement and we’re moving one step toward that.”
The students will be learning the basic units; learn what they
mean and the different tools that are used. For its experiment, the
class was to break up into groups. As a group it would measure the
width and length of a standard desk.
“We’ll discuss the results by groups, we’ll talk about standards,”
Pitts said. “We will make meter tapes and we will only deal with
metric measurement for our test.”
Before the class divided into groups, it had a discussion about
some key issues.
Pitts asked the class why standards are important. It seemed as if
whenever a question was asked the whole class wanted to share
thoughts.
“We wouldn’t know how big the Empire State Building is or
anything,” one boy answered.
Madison Lamb, 9, said that if there weren’t standards then
everything would have to just be an estimate.
“If [we were] measuring our desks, it would all come out
different,” Madison said.
Pitts explained that the standard of measurement the class would
use for this exercise would be straws, and then she handed them out
to each team.
“We’re going to see if this will work as the standard and be
accurate,” Pitts said. “Measure anybody’s desk because they’re all
the same and we’ll see what we come up with.”
Huddled in their groups with measuring unit in hand, the children
were giggling and enjoying their scientific endeavor. The groups
recorded work on the white board and the class was ready to discuss
the results.
What it noticed is that there were many discrepancies. The
students soon found out that Pitts had tricked them, handing out
straws that varied in length.
“Why aren’t the measurements the same?” Pitts said. “Because the
straws were different in length.”
She told them that in science it’s called a discrepant event,
explaining that it is the difference in what one thinks they have and
one actually has.
“The experiment was fun because you use things like straws, which
is not like using a ruler, which would be really easy,” Morgan Lebby
said. “You have to guess it and try to figure it out with any type of
standard measurement.”
Tara Board, 9, said that she liked learning the term discrepant
events.
“The funnest part was figuring out what Mrs. Pitts had done --
that she tricked us by making the straws uneven.”
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