When my son came home from school with math homework that
asked him to estimate the weight of objects, judging which was heavier, I knew
it was time to make a DIY balancing scale. This idea is brainchild of Quirky
Momma Deirdre Smith, aka JDaniel4’s
Mom.
Construction is simple. I used a wire pants hanger from
the dry cleaner, yarn, and two sturdy paper cups. At the two bottom ends of the
hanger, I hung yarn, to which I tied a paper cup (I’d punched holes in the paper cup just below the
rim).
The cardboard tube on the pants hanger kept the yarn from moving along
the bottom of the hanger. Note: Make sure your cups hang equal distance.
Now hang over a door knob and get ready for some math
fun!
My son grabbed lots of small objects. I grabbed a handful
of quarters.
He put an object in one cup and balanced the scale with
quarters in the other cup. We recorded the weights.
1 matchbox car = 4 quarters
1 calculator = 5 quarters
1 LEGO Ninjago spinner = 5 quarters
1 mini flashlight = 6 quarters
1 yoda writing pen = 3 quarters
2 rocks = 3 quarters
Now I asked him what object weighed the most. “Easy!” he
said. “The flashlight!” I asked him how he knew that was the heaviest. “Because
it took the most quarters to balance it.”
“Why not use rocks as a unit of measurement?” I asked. This
required some thought. After a long pause, he said, “Because they’re not the
same size?”
“YES! The quarters are a good unit of measurement
because they all weigh the same. The rocks do not.”
I kept the questions coming. My son was up to the challenge. “If the yoda pen and the 2
rocks both took 3 quarters each to balance the scale, what conclusion can we form?”
“They weigh the same!” he said. We put them in the cups
and, lo and behold, the scale was balanced. The hanger was level.
When I asked my son later what his favorite part of the
day was, believe it or not, our DIY scale was it. I LOVE that my son loves
learning!
LOVE IT! Totally fun and thinking about money math... if we could see what weighs more to make 25cents...a quarter or 2 dimes and a nickel?
ReplyDeleteIt`s our DIY Balancing Scale http://hubavinki.blogspot.com/2013/07/blog-post_26.html
ReplyDeleteThanks, it`s very useful!
This is fabulous. What year was your son in when he did this activity?
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing such great ideas!
My son was seven. He had loads of fun with this!
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