National Maths Day 2008Damian Howison
Damian's wife Catherine, who also teaches at the school, but not in mathematics, is renown among the staff for her culinary skills. Generously, she spent the evening before National Maths Day baking Chocolate Chip Digit Cookies for afternoon tea.
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May 23rd was a pupil free day and maths staff organised a workshop to support their efforts to integrate a task centre and Maths300 into their curriculum. (See Damian's previous story.)
It was also National Mathematics Day so among the other hands-on materials were Chocolate Chip Digit Cookies. |
| Can you arrange the digits into a 'plus' sign so that the sum of the digits in the vertical arm is equal to the sum of the digits in the horizontal arm? | ![]() |
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Well done. Now how do you convince me that the sums are the same? |
| Easy, 9 pairs with 1, 8 with 2, 7 with 3 and 6 with 4. That's 20 in each arm and the 5 is shared.
Great, but a mathematician asks: Can I check this another way? This question generates informal, incidental teaching moments which:
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And what happens if there is a different number in the middle, say 9?
If it does work with 9 in the middle, are there other solutions? If so:
For more information, investigate Task 35, Crosses. |
| Then celebrate your solutions like this. | ![]() |