TPT
Total:
$0.00
SamizdatMath Banner

SamizdatMath

Rated 4.97 out of 5, based on 2492 reviews
838 Followers
Free State of Brooklyn, New York, United States
About the store
40 years of teaching mathematics from pre-k to college. I have a BA in Urban Studies from (insert prestigious Ivy League university here) and an MS from (insert name of public university in major metropolitan area.)
Read more

All resources

Preview of MathBusters: What is a "Landslide Election." Analyzing the 2016 Election Numbers

MathBusters: What is a "Landslide Election." Analyzing the 2016 Election Numbers

Created by
SamizdatMath
This activity uses the results of the 2016 Presidential Election, as well as all the previous US Elections, to determine if it was, as one ignoramus called it "a landslide." By examining previous election results based on their electoral college and "popular" vote, students will see for themselves using factual data that "landslides" in US Presidential Elections are fairly unique events, and then decide for themselves using the actual facts as compiled by the US Government whether the results of
Preview of An Introduction to Survivor Bias: Statistics in the Real World

An Introduction to Survivor Bias: Statistics in the Real World

Created by
SamizdatMath
Here is an interesting fact: did you know that most castles built during the middle ages were made from wood? It's a true fact! But you're probably thinking: wait, if most castles were made of wood, how come when you google the word "castle," all you see are stone edifices? The answer is: survivor bias! Think about it: you build a wood castle, and over the years, what's the thing that threatens it most? FIRE! So all those wood castles burnt to the ground over the last thousand years, while the
Preview of Blowing Bubbles: Recipes, Ratios and Histograms

Blowing Bubbles: Recipes, Ratios and Histograms

Created by
SamizdatMath
This is an incredible, absolutely wonderful investigation that will get your students working with ratios to pursue a worthy goal: to make the best bubble juice that makes the longest lasting bubbles! All you need to do are three ingredients: dishwashing liquid, glycerin (available at pharmacies or online) and di-hydrogen oxide, better known as "water." Your students mix different amounts of the the three ingredients together and test to see how long the bubbles last. But the activity doesn't e
Preview of White Supremacy and Confederate Monuments Timeline Activity

White Supremacy and Confederate Monuments Timeline Activity

Created by
SamizdatMath
This is an activity that uses data collected by the Southern Poverty Law Center tracking the use of Confederate symbols in the form of monuments, courthouses, schools, and other public amenities, including parks, highways and holidays. The activity takes place in 3 parts: The first part is that students assemble and label a timeline that tracks the rise of Confederate symbols from 1860 to the present day (2016.) In the second part, students match dates to 10 different events in Civil Rights h
Preview of Food Justice, Food Sovereignty and the Zero Mile Meal; Food & Math

Food Justice, Food Sovereignty and the Zero Mile Meal; Food & Math

Created by
SamizdatMath
This is one in a continuing series of activities that takes mathematics and applies it to social issue, including Food Waste and Mathematics: From Farm to Table to Dump, Mathematics, Demographics & Slavery: The 1790 Census in Ratio, Percents & Graphs, MathBusters: Percentage Practice to Analyze 2016 Election Results, and Statistics, Histograms and Lies Presidential Candidates Tell. In this case, we are looking at how far food must travel in order to make it from where it is produced to the place
Preview of Division: Calculating, Rounding and Comparing: Trump's Golf Trips

Division: Calculating, Rounding and Comparing: Trump's Golf Trips

Created by
SamizdatMath
This is an activity designed to help our students learn about the importance of rounding off numbers after they have been divided and using them as a basis for comparison. One of the things our students should learn is the importance of rounding numbers to that they are easier to handle and to cite as a statistic. For example, to say "for the same amount of taxpayer money that Donald Trump has spent on golfing vacations to his Mar-a-Lago resort we could have paid for 9041.59132007 Meals on Whee
Preview of Basic Statistics Hands On Investigation: Mean, Median, Mode

Basic Statistics Hands On Investigation: Mean, Median, Mode

Created by
SamizdatMath
This is a comprehensive investigation of basic measures of central tendency (mean, median and mode) using a hands-on approach. This investigation occurs as a set of hands-on experiments that groups of students conduct using a set of 7 cups, Students start by filling the cups with water (or sand, or beans, or whatever you like) to various levels, and then re-arranging the position and levels of the cup in order to find the mean, median and mode. By focusing the students' attention on the concept
Preview of Statistics Detective: 2 super-tough problems using mean, median, mode and range

Statistics Detective: 2 super-tough problems using mean, median, mode and range

Created by
SamizdatMath
This is one of an occasional series of mondo-tough problems that use small numbers (or no numbers at all!) Here’s how it works: we all teach our students how to take a group of numbers and calculate the range, mean, median and mode. Seems pretty simple, and our students tired of it damned quickly. Can you blame them? It’s just “do what the teacher told me to do, and then write the answer here...” kind of busywork. But what if we were to switch the tables on our students: let’s give them t
Preview of Estimation & Measurement with Plastic Links: Link n' Learn

Estimation & Measurement with Plastic Links: Link n' Learn

Created by
SamizdatMath
Do you have a bucket full of plastic links in one of your bins and wondering what can you possibly do with a huge pail of these colorful plastic links. Your prayers have been answered! These are 10 different measurement cards, in 8 x 10 as well as 5 x 8 that you can print out, laminate and set up "estimation stations" which your kids will enjoy. They will estimate the length of their hand, and then measure it, as well as their foot, arm and around their head. They'll measure the longest and sh
Preview of Addition + Probability = Fun: Cover Up & the Big Cover Up

Addition + Probability = Fun: Cover Up & the Big Cover Up

Created by
SamizdatMath
The game is simple, but the strategy will keep your students engaged for hours: roll 3 dice, choose 2, add the numbers together and cover up that number on the board. Except things aren't so easy: if you roll a 1, 1 and 6, should you combine 1 + 1 = 2, or 1 + 6 = 7? This game opens up some nice opportunities to discuss winning strategies using probability. A follow-up game, "The Big Cover Up," also uses 3 dice, but to make things even more fun, players have to choose between combining 1, 2 or 3
Preview of Olympic Sprint Records: Using Decimals to Understand and Predict Records

Olympic Sprint Records: Using Decimals to Understand and Predict Records

Created by
SamizdatMath
Since the first modern Olympics in 1896, runners in the 100 meter sprint have been setting records on a regular basis, earning the title of the "fastest human on earth." How long can these records be broken? Will there eventually be a runner who can do the 100 meter sprint in just a few seconds? This activity shows students how the change from measuring time from tenths of a second to hundredths of a second allowed more records to be broken, and that by graphing these records, the new records ca
Preview of What is the Value of a Hit? The Mathematics of Baseball using Ratios & Percents

What is the Value of a Hit? The Mathematics of Baseball using Ratios & Percents

Created by
SamizdatMath
Are you interested in developing your students' understanding of decimals and statistics using baseball? This activity focuses on the skills of computing and comparing batting averages, as well as seeing what effect a "hit" can have on a player's average; that is, a player with fewer "at bats" will get a bigger "bump" from a hit, than a player with many at bats. This activity encourages students to see that a single statistic cannot tell you everything about the quality of a baseball player.
Showing 1-12 of 12 results

About the store

Experience

40 years of teaching mathematics from pre-k to college. I have a BA in Urban Studies from (insert prestigious Ivy League university here) and an MS from (insert name of public university in major metropolitan area.)

Teaching style

Sloppy and full of bravado....

Awards & shining teacher moments

Teacher of the Galaxy Award, given by members of the Remulon 8 School Committee

My own education history

BA, School of Hard Knocks, 1982 MS, Ms. Rogers College of Secretarial Psychology, Ames, Iowa 1994 PhD, Clown College, New Haven, Connecticut, 2001

Additional biographical information

Read my totally irritating blog at www.bltm.com