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March Enrichment Board

Name: ___________________

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March Planner

Sunday

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Plan your activities throughout the month so that you can complete them all by the end!

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Bingo-Cover all the things you completed

Research your ALPPs Topic!

Go to the Public Library and look for books on your topic!

Pi Day! (3/14) - Choose 1 or -2 activities from slides 7-8 to complete, bring your evidence to school or link on the page!

Complete 2 or more Lessons on Typing Club

Hour of Code: Little Dot Adventure

Insert Your Certificate on Slide 5

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Think Law

Watch the video and follow along

Pause the video as needed & Use the ThinkLaw paper to show your thinking.

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Hour Of Code - Certificate

Insert a screenshot of your hour of code certificate

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Spring Logic Puzzles

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Pi Day Activities - Choose 1-2

  • Decide which color will represent which number.
  • Create your paper chain or bracelet by taking a strip of paper or bead in the color you have chosen to represent the number 3 and making it into a loop. Close the loop with a stapler or piece of tape.
  • Take a strip that represents the number 1 and thread it through your loop. Close the loop.
  • Repeat with the strips that match the numbers in π so that you have a visual representation of π. How long can you make it? Here are the first 100 decimal places to get you started:

3.1415926535 8979323846 2643383279 5028841971 6939937510 5820974944 5923078164 0628620899 8628034825 3421170679

Pi Day isn't just for math! Readers and writers have a role as well.

  • Write a poem in which each line corresponds to the number of syllables in π — so, you would have three syllables in the first line, one in the second, four in the third, one in the fourth and so on. How many lines can you write?
  • A more intense writing activity is to create a myth melding π and the ancient Greeks. Can you come up with a story about how the ancient gods created, used or abused pi?

Create a Pi Chain or bracelet

The Never Ending Number Story

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Pi Day Activities - Choose 1-2

Calling all circular household items! Measure the diameter and circumference of cans, jars, glasses, bowls (even toilet bowls!), and rugs to see if you are able to find π in your house. To find π, divide the circumference of the circle (all the way around) by the diameter (the length from one side of the circle to the other):

C ÷ d = π

Do you get close?

  • Read Sir Circumference and the Dragon of Pi on Epic! Then take the community quiz

Calculate Pi

Read About PI

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THANKS!

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