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Pi (Pie) Day Math Activities 5th 6th Grade Middle School Geometry Anchor Charts

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Peas in a Pod
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Grade Levels
5th - 7th
Resource Type
Standards
Formats Included
  • PDF
Pages
20 pages
$3.75
$3.75
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Description

Celebrate Pi (Pie) Day with The Ultimate Geometry Championship! Students use geometry anchor charts in a FUN game to attain mastery of volume, area, perimeter, and circumference formulas.


I host the championship after teaching our geometry chapter. Essentially, it is a matching game that is played for several rounds. Students become paired with others working at their level. The student or students with the most rounds won is crowned the classroom Ultimate Geometry Champion(s)! It is during these math championships that my students really become excited and truly began to grasp and retain the formulas.

This resource can also be found with others like it in The Ultimate Math Championship Bundle: Click here to SAVE $ with The Ultimate Math Championship Growing Bundle!

How to play the game:

Print and cut out cards. I like to print the answer cards on one color of cardstock and the problems on another. Spread out the answer cards face up on a desk between the 2 players. It is also possible to play with a group of 3. Place the problem cards face down in a shuffled pile. Have players alternate drawing a problem card, solving it on a whiteboard (or paper), and searching for the matching answer card. The player with the most matches wins that round!

Includes:

2 label options for the storage envelope, Anchor charts for reference (I usually leave these up for reference during the first few rounds.), game cards, answer keys, instruction cards, and 2 versions of Ultimate Geometry Champion recognition certificates. 2 versions of the winner’s pyramid are provided. One has pre-drawn bands for 6 rounds. The other is blank, so you can have your class play the amount of rounds that suits your schedule best.

How to create “A Championship”:

1. Generate excitement! During the introduction of the game and rules, play up the title, have the students do a drum roll tap on the top of their desks as a build up for introducing the pyramid.

2. Create a safe learning atmosphere.

Before handing out any game cards, it’s important to have a class discussion about “safe learning environments”. I always stress that we all have different strengths, we are a classroom family, and here to build each other up. I tell them that the world, even the playground, can be full of critical people. But, our classroom MUST be a safe space where we do not tease each other or point out others’ difficulties. Kindness must be practiced at all times in our room, and there will be consequences for teasing. My students have generally agreed that they do not want to be ridiculed for something they haven’t mastered yet, and promise not to ridicule others for not always coming out on top.

**Once four people are left in the bottom color band, I cross out all 4 names and move them to the next color band.

3. The Pyramid

The goal of the championship is to find the Ultimate Geometry Champion. In round 1 , I list all my student’s names in one color at the bottom of the pyramid provided. I project it on my whiteboard using a document projector. You could also use a smartboard. The students then pair up, and play the matching game. The winner of that round crosses their name off the list and writes it in the next band above using a new color.

In round 2, I pair students up again to play the card game. This time their opponent must be from the same color band they are in.

(Using the pyramid example found it the preview, Marcus & Sam might play each other because they both lost the last round and are still in the purple band while Kalie & Hunter could play each other because they have both won 2 rounds and are both in the orange band. Again, the winner of the round gets to cross their name off, and list it above in the next color band. )

I only play one round per day with my class. We may skip days too. We end up playing 5 or 6 rounds, and the person or people at the top of the color band pyramid are proclaimed the Ultimate Math Champions for that topic. They are pretty excited just being recognized with the title, but you can also reward them with the included certificates and/or small prizes.

Differentiation

Students will start being paired by ability level as the pyramid grows. This helps math review becomes less intimidating. When a certain topic is completely beyond a students grasp, I have paired lower level learners together to practice a topic on their level. For example, I’ve had two 6th graders playing the long division version while the rest of the class played the geometry version.

*******************************************

When I received a call from my principal that the superintendent of our large school district was visiting our site and they would be coming by MY classroom in 20 minutes, I knew this was the activity that I wanted them to see. My students were familiar with the game, so I quickly set it up. The superintendent walked around my room and observed the class. On his way out, he stopped to offer me a compliment. The said that he was so impressed with the class and activity. He continued to tell me how he was happy to see how engaged the kids were and how impressed he was with their actual deep knowledge of the math concepts. I could not have been happier with walk through that day!

***Other topics are coming soon! Check back for new versions based on place value, long division, integers, fractions, decimals, and more!

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Total Pages
20 pages
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
90 minutes
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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Recognize volume as an attribute of solid figures and understand concepts of volume measurement.
Find the volume of a right rectangular prism with whole-number side lengths by packing it with unit cubes, and show that the volume is the same as would be found by multiplying the edge lengths, equivalently by multiplying the height by the area of the base. Represent threefold whole-number products as volumes, e.g., to represent the associative property of multiplication.
Apply the formulas 𝘝 = 𝘭 × 𝘸 × 𝘩 and 𝘝 = 𝘣 × 𝘩 for rectangular prisms to find volumes of right rectangular prisms with whole-number edge lengths in the context of solving real world and mathematical problems.
Find the area of right triangles, other triangles, special quadrilaterals, and polygons by composing into rectangles or decomposing into triangles and other shapes; apply these techniques in the context of solving real-world and mathematical problems.
Find the volume of a right rectangular prism with fractional edge lengths by packing it with unit cubes of the appropriate unit fraction edge lengths, and show that the volume is the same as would be found by multiplying the edge lengths of the prism. Apply the formulas 𝘝 = 𝘭 𝘸 𝘩 and 𝘝 = 𝘣 𝘩 to find volumes of right rectangular prisms with fractional edge lengths in the context of solving real-world and mathematical problems.

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