NumbersAlive! Foundation
NumbersAlive! Foundation creates engaging community-oriented content that augments curriculum. The content alleviates student/community math anxiety; increases mathematical thinking using visual technology and local physical materials; and mentors students to write, design, and speak about their learning. Students research, discover and speak about math’s relevance and uses in their environment while creating student-centered films and maker activities. Sample activities/lessons that create a solid foundation of math relevance and reasoning for life and careers include: Geometry Talks; Numeracy Activities; Edible Math; Being a Puzzle Maker; The Entrepreneur Math Toolbox; Building NumberOpolis!; and The Numbers Show. Since the activities are adaptable to all environments, they are easily scaled globally. We began the journey of scaling the studio-filmed Numbers Show to the on-location student-designed Global Traveling Numbers Show after completing the prototype, Cinco de Mayo. Covid postponed the April 2020 planned student-focused film in Botswana’s parks and conservation centers.
Mathematical thinking/reasoning encourages outside-the-box thinking necessary to investigate and solve local and global issues. According to OECD’s PISA, the ability to reason logically and present arguments in honest and convincing ways is a skill that is becoming increasingly important. However, mathematical thinking, logical reasoning and developing convincing presentations are rarely taught as part of core curriculum.
NumbersAlive! Foundation focuses on investigating questions posed by students and adults that encourage discussion and mathematical thinking. Examples include: When will I use a trapezoid? If an octopus loses a “leg” is it still an “octopus?” Discussing such questions, rather than focusing on getting the “correct answer” to quasi-realistic math “problems” encourages a positive relationship with mathematics for learners of all ages anywhere with or without internet. Exercises remain useful to increase skills without losing focus on the original questions/goals.
Covid-19 disrupted traditional in-school classes. Teachers/schools immediately needed to rely on families as full partners in the teaching and learning of their children. We responded by creating and updating prior activities/lessons making them adaptable to local living environments. Starting with the question, considering tools needed, and discussing the approach to the investigation in the learner’s voice taps their imagination/creativity and develops mathematical thinking.
NumbersAlive! Foundation places students at the center of their learning. We encourage students to become “math makers” and speak about math in their own voice. The content alleviates math anxiety by making math relevant/meaningful to students/families using cross-disciplinary lessons, discovery and storytelling. Our activities augment curriculum and increase mathematical thinking to create a solid foundation for life and careers. All activities are adaptable depending on time, location and participant requirements and can be completed with available materials. Three samples follow.
Numbers in the Park takes students on student-focused local adventures. We post daily social media versions that are adaptable short family-friendly activities based on photos or current events.
The Numbers Show uses film as a platform for numerically-linked dialogue. After creating studio episodes, apps, and an animated film, we began incorporating students into the entire content creation process, from writing to puppeteering, voicing, and filming/editing. We have begun collaborating with local filmmakers worldwide to create episodes.
Building NumberOpolis! incorporates design-thinking to construct an entire town for numbers 0-9, and math/science constants. Building number-linked houses encourages students to think “outside-the-box” and create using non-standard shapes. Adding town buildings and infrastructure suggests possible careers and introduces entrepreneurship.
NumbersAlive! Foundation targets teachers, families, and K-12 students from all communities needing activities to alleviate math anxiety, increase learning engagement, and encourage mathematical thinking. Focusing activities/lessons on questions raised by students within areas of their interest flips the approach to “student-up” from “teacher-down.” We provide hands-on activities and group projects that demonstrate the usefulness of math by investigating actual local questions/issues adapted to the age or sophistication of the learners.
All of general activities and lessons are easily adapted to local environments everywhere in the world whether or not students have access to quality connectivity. Dr. Klemm has brought her ideas to diverse students around the globe as well as teachers of Syrian refugees in the Beqaa Valley, Lebanon, near the Syrian border; towns in the Caribbean for the US Department of State/USAID; and disadvantaged and well-connected students in USA and UAE. Math is a universal language and group projects including design-thinking and student presentation of their creative ideas have excited learners in diverse locations and shown them how math will be part of their daily life and any career.
We ask students to identify their interests and what they think about math (what aspects are fun, boring, difficult, etc.). The lessons are then adapted to their interests and discussed in conjunction with the students identifying those interests. We augment with necessary topics often not mentioned by students (i.e., finance/budgeting, measuring to renovate a kitchen, teamwork, etc.). Students learn how math is useful in areas of their personal interests, as well as those of their peers, and how to speak about their math learning. This student-focused approach allows them to personally observe the usefulness of math rather than be told “You will use this someday.”
- Enable access to quality learning experiences in low-connectivity settings—including imaginative play, collaborative projects, and hands-on experiments.
The film “Cinco de Mayo” demonstrates a NumbersAlive! Foundation collaborative student-focused quality learning experience for children in low- or high-connectivity families. Students were involved in imaginative play as they participated in ALL aspects of the film: developing the script; becoming the voices and handlers of number puppets; creating costumes and graphic designs; etc. They learned life lessons of collaboration over individual success by having to cut/remake a quality film. The School Board, teachers, and parents were amazed to watch students excited about learning math and a 2nd language while collaborating with students of diverse skills and backgrounds.
- Pilot: An organization deploying a tested product, service, or business model in at least one community.
NumbersAlive! Foundation activities and lessons evolved from 10+ years of designing and implementing programs and activities with thousands of students, teachers and families at public events, maker fairs, festivals and classrooms around the world. “Numbers in the Park” evolved as a result of Covid in Washington, DC to 100-200 students and family members. Small group lessons will be tested in July 2021 to 100+ disadvantaged students identified by schools and partner organizations in greater Washington, DC. Building NumberOpolis! has been presented at maker fairs and schools to 500+ students and teachers. The 2019 film “Cinco de Mayo” was created with 20+ 5th/6th grade students and teachers of Youngblood Intermediate School in Houston, TX. Covid postponed our approved April 2020 plans to work with teachers, Ministries of Education and Tourism, a local filmmaker, National Park professionals and local students to create 1+ films about “Animal Patterns and Conservancy” in Botswana.
Founder and CEO