Shining light on geometry
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.Marisa O’Neil
Nobody wants to stay cooped up in a classroom on a beautiful, warm
day to study math. Especially when you can see the waves crashing
outside the window.
So Newport Elementary School fifth-grade teacher Jeff Hurst took
his class outside to their beachfront playground for a sunny geometry
lesson on Monday.
With some sidewalk chalk, twine and wooden dowels, students
fashioned giant-sized compasses. After doing some basic circles and
lines labeled “diameter,” “chord” and “tangent,” they got down to the
fun stuff -- drawing colorful flowers.
“They’re exploring the properties of arcs,” Hurst explained. “But
yeah, they’re making flowers.”
Using the twine compass, each group of two drew huge circles on
the blacktop, then created a series of arcs that linked up to form
petals. They filled in their drawings with different-colored chalk
and some, like 10-year-old Mia Van Bergh, added an artist’s
signature.
“You’re coloring it orange?” Mia asked another group as she
surveyed their work.
“Yeah,” 11-year-old Sean Sullivan replied.
“Ew,” Mia exclaimed quietly, after a short pause.
Nate Gould, 10, and Chase Pennington, 11, super-sized their
drawing. It sprawled a good 10 feet across the blacktop.
About 25 feet away, a meticulously colored flower was already
finished. Warnings written on the pavement around the flower advised
trespassers to stay away, lest the work be defiled.
“Do not touch!” 11-year-old Taylor French and Carolyn Kinnear had
written next to a large circle marking their territory. “Do not pass
line!”
Taylor stepped inside to make a quick touch up.
“You guys passed the line,” 11-year-old Nick Albertini pointed
out.
“It’s ours,” Taylor reminded him.
“Oh yeah,” he said. “My bad.”
But despite their warnings, Taylor and Carolyn realized the nature
of their work was transitory.
“It won’t last past recess when all the little kids come out in a
minute,” Carolyn said, glancing toward the school gates through which
scores of first- and second-graders would soon flow.
“Tragic,” she added with a sigh.
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot
education writer Marisa O’Neil visits a campus in the Newport-Mesa
area and writes about her experience.
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