C1.2 Create and translate patterns using movements, sounds, objects, shapes, letters, and numbers.

Activity 1: Harvest Festival


Using the melody of the song The 12 Days of Christmas as a guide, invent a story where students can solve a problem. As an example, here is a summary of the story The Harvest Festival, which could be presented to students.

In this story, a farmer is preparing a soup for the harvest festival. However, the farmer wants and needs vegetables every day for 12 days before the harvest festival. The farmer requires more and more vegetables from day to day; for example, on the first day 1 potato; on the second day, 1 potato and 2 carrots; on the third day, 1 potato, 2 carrots and 3 turnips; etc.

Source: translated from Guide d’enseignement efficace des mathématiques de la maternelle à la 3e année, Modélisation et algèbre, Fascicule 1, Régularités et relations, p. 49.

Activity 2: Rhythmic Patterns


Summary

Children's first experiences with patterns are often repetitive rhymes in songs and rhymes; for example, "B-I-N-G-O". In this activity, they identify the pattern rule of the rhyme or rhythm in a song and reproduce it using musical instruments or dance movements.

Materials

  • song or rhyme of your choice
  • percussion instruments (one per child)

Directions

To introduce and emphasize the pattern rule, have students use percussion instruments (made or purchased) to accompany a song or rhyme; for example, in the song Bingo, the rhythm "tap, tap, tap-tap-tap" represents the rhythm pattern rule.

Modify the activity by asking students to create a dance with repetitive movements to accompany the melody of a song with a repetitive rhythm; for example, Old MacDonald Had a Farm. Explain that they can use three different movements to create their pattern, such as jumping, reaching and twisting, and that the pattern is repeated when the chorus is sung. Next, have them present their pattern to another student, who must explain the repeating pattern they observe.

Also have students create phonics/sound patterns, which are patterns made of words that contain a sound being studied. Have them find pictures of these words and use them to create a pattern.

Example

To convey the concept of a pattern rule, be sure to always emphasize the repetition of gestures, sounds of musical instruments, or the rhythm of the music.

Source: translated from Guide d’enseignement efficace des mathématiques de la maternelle à la 3e année, Modélisation et algèbre, Fascicule 1, Régularités et relations, p. 82-83.

Activity 3: Single File


Summary

In this activity, students are asked to create non-numeric patterns with repeating patterns using pictures and then change the representation of their pattern.

Materials

Directions

Invite students to sit in a circle on the floor. Read a story in which there are repeated words, gestures, or characters; for example, in the story The Little Red Hen, the characters (the chicken, the goose, the cat, and the dog) always appear and speak in the same order. This order is a pattern (chicken, goose, cat, dog; chicken, goose, cat, dog; chicken, goose, cat, dog).

Point out this pattern by asking students the following questions:

  • What do you notice about the order in which the animals speak?
  • Are there things that are always repeated in the story?

Pick students to represent the chicken, goose, cat, and dog. Ask the other students to name the animals in the order they appear (chicken, goose, cat, dog). Each time an animal is named, the student representing it must stand up.

Ask students the following questions:

  • How do you know who will be the next person to get up?
  • Which animal always comes after the chicken? the goose? the cat? the dog?
  • How did you find out who was next to get up?

Using pictures of animals (Appendix 1.1) posted on the board, represent the animal pattern and show students how to express their understanding of the pattern by stating:

  • the position (write the number representing the position above each animal);
  • the pattern core (draw a wave under each iteration of the core);
  • the pattern rule (the chicken is first, followed by the goose, followed by the cat, followed by the dog).

Example

Continue by having students create a pattern of animals using, for example, their sounds, plastic animals, drawings, or animal prints made with ink pads or sponges.

Ask students to describe the similarities and differences between the different patterns created; for example, the pattern rule and ABCD structure are the same; the number of elements in the patterns is the same, but not the mode of representation.

Source: translated from Guide d’enseignement efficace des mathématiques de la maternelle à la 3e année, Modélisation et algèbre, Fascicule 1, Régularités et relations, p. 108-109.