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Grocery Store Math
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The grocery store is one of the best examples of a place where
math is real. Since trips to the grocery usually affect everyone in
the family, the following activities include various levels of
difficulty within the activity. Look for the symbols to determine
which parts of the activities are for which ages:
- for grades K-1
- for grades 2 and 3
- for grades 4 through 8.
All of these activities can take place over many visits to the
store.
1) Get Ready
Getting ready to go shopping can help parents and children share
their thinking strategies about math with one another.
What you'll need
- Paper
- Pencil
- Coupons (if you use
them)
What to do
- Involve the family in
making a list. List each item and mark with checks or tallies to
indicate the number needed.
- Look at the price of an
item you bought last week and intend to buy this week. How much
did it cost last week? How much does it cost this week? Do you
want to
- Pay this week's price?
- Wait until the price
comes down?
- Or, stock up if it is on
sale?
- Involve the group in
deciding how much milk or juice will be needed for a week. You
might decide to estimate by cups, explaining that 4 cups are
equal to a quart and 4 quarts are a gallon.
- If you collect coupons,
organize them. Choose the coupons that match the items on the
grocery list. Discuss how much money will be saved on various
items by using coupons.
Practicing measurement and estimation will help improve your
children's ability to predict amounts with accuracy.
2) Scan It
Shopping is a part of life which really necessitates our being
mathematically informed to be good consumers.
What you'll need
What to do
- Notice whether the grocery
store has prices on the items or whether the pricing is
dependent on scanners.
- If there are no prices on
the items, notice the prices listed on the shelves.
- Assign each child the job of
remembering the price of a few items, particularly those listed
on sale.
- Being aware of the prices of
items will help you verify that the scanners are working
properly and that the total is accurate when you go to check
out.
The ever increasing use of technology in the grocery store puts
the burden on you to beware. Your protection lies in having strong
mental math skills.
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3) Weighing In
One fun place to try out estimation and measurement skills in the
grocery store is the produce section where everyone can have the
opportunity to participate.
What you'll need
What to do
- Help your child examine the
scale. Explain that pounds are divided into smaller parts called
ounces and 16 ounces equal a pound.
- Gather the produce you are
purchasing, and estimate the weight of each item before weighing
it.
- Use sample questions to
foster thinking about measurement and estimation. You might Want
to ask your child,
How much do you think 6 apples will weigh? More than a pound,
less than a pound, equal to a pound? How much do the apples
really weigh? Do they weigh more or less than you predicted? How
about the potatoes? Will 6 potatoes weigh more or less than the
apples? How much do potatoes cost per pound? If they cost ___
cents per pound, what is the total cost?
Some grocery stores have scales that tell all the answers to
these questions, so in that case, estimate using the same
procedure to make sure the machines are accurate.
Activities like this help children develop number sense for
weight and foster the ability to compare items when measuring.
4) Get into Shapes
The grocery store is filled with geometric shapes.
What you'll need
What to do
- Show your child the
pictures of the shapes on this page before going to the store.
This will help to identify them when you get to the store.
- At the store, ask your
child questions to generate interest in the shapes.
- Which items are
solid? Which are fiat?
- Which shapes have
fiat sides?
- Which have circles
for faces? Rectangles?
- Do any have points
at the top?
- Point out shapes and talk
about their qualities and their use in daily life.
- Look to see what shapes
stack easily. Why?.
- Try to find some cones.
How many can you find?
- Look for pyramids.
- Determine which solids
take up a lot of space and which ones stack well.
- Discuss why space is
important to the grocer and why the grocer cares about what
stacks well.
Boxes, cans, rolls of toilet paper or paper towels, ice cream
cones and cones that hold flowers, plus produce such as oranges,
grapes, and tomatoes are all geometric shapes. Recognizing these
shapes helps children connect math to the real world.
5) Check Out
The check out counter is where we commonly think about math in
the grocery store. It's where the total is added up, the money is
exchanged, and the change is returned.
What you'll need
- All the items you
intend to buy
What to do
- Have your child estimate
the total.
- Ask, if I have 10
one-dollar bills, how many will I have to give the clerk? What
if I have 20 one-dollar bills? 5? How much change should I
receive? What coins will I get?
- Count the change with your
child to make sure the change is correct.
One way to make estimating totals easy is to assign an average
price to each item. If the average price for each item is $2 and if
you have 10 items, the estimate would be about $20.
6) It's in the Bag
Here's some fun estimation to do with bags full of groceries.
What you'll need
What to do
- Have your child guess how
many objects there are in a bag. Ask: Is it full? Could it hold
more? Could it tear if you put more in it? Are there more things
in another bag of the same size? Why do some bags hold more or
less than others?
- Estimate the weight of the
bag of groceries. Does it weigh 5 pounds, 10 pounds, or more?
How can you check your estimate? Now, compare one bag to
another. Which is lighter or heavier? Why?
This activity exposes children to the experiences of counting
items and comparing qualities, as well as to judging spatial
relationships and capacity. It shows how to estimate weight by
feeling how much the bag weighs, comparing it to a known weight
(such as a 5-pound bag of sugar), or weighing it on a scale.
7) Put It Away
Now, the sorting begins as you put away the groceries.
What you'll need
- Your bags of groceries
- Counter top or table
to group items on
What to do
- Find one characteristic
that is the same for some of the products. For example, some are
boxes and some are cans.
- Put all the items together
that have the same characteristic.
- Find another way to group
these items.
- Continue sorting, finding
as many different ways to group the items as you can.
- Play "Guess My
Rule." In this game, you sort the items and invite your
child to guess your rule for sorting them. Then, your child can
sort the items, and you can guess the rule.
Sorting helps children develop classifying and reasoning skills
and the ability to examine data and information.
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