Showing posts with label math. Show all posts
Showing posts with label math. Show all posts

Saturday, August 27, 2022

The skill of estimation

Our grandchildren and our children are going back to school and I was thinking about when I had the opportunity to teach Math for a year. One of the skills I tried to teach was the skill of estimation. In our lives, we may not always need to be precise, so learning how to estimate is a good skill. I wish I had this website to refer to when I was teaching the skill of estimating. 

https://www.mathsisfun.com/measure/estimate-distance.html 

Here is an example of what they show students:

Here is a clever method to estimate how far away something is:

  • Hold your arm straight out, thumb up
  • Close one eye, align your thumb with a distant object
  • Switch eyes (don't move your thumb!)
  • Your thumb will seem to change position

Now ... estimate how far it moved sideways (you could imagine the length of a car or something).

Multiply that by 10 and you have an estimate of how far away.

 

thumb distance

Example

Here your thumb seems to jump about half a car length.

Half a car's length is about 2.5 metres.

Times 10: the car is about 25 metres away.

How it Works

thumb distance is 10x eye distance

 The distance from your eyes to your thumb is about 10 times the distance between your eyes

thumb distance far

 

And so the distance to the far object is also about 10 times the width your thumb seems to move at the far object.

 

thumb distance similar angles

This works because the triangles are similar,
and so the relative lengths are the same.

Learn the Size of Things

To be useful you need to know how long, wide or tall things are!

  • Small cars are 4 m long
  • Large cars are 5 m long
  • Cars are about 1.8 m wide
  • Adults are about 1.8 m tall
  • A 5-year-old is about 1 m tall
  • A normal doorway is 2 m high and 0.8 m wide
  • A truck and trailer are about 20 m long
  • The width of a small house is about 8 m
  • The width of a large house is about 12 m
  • The height of a single-storey house is about 5 m
  • The height of a two-storey house is about 8 m
  • Tall buildings have about 3.5 m for every storey

(Note: to use this method for height, tilt your head and thumb 90° to the side.)

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Were you born in the 1900's

Here is an interesting factoid, and it works with all members of my family, so it might work with yours
I was born in 1946 this year I will 65 add my age and the the last two digits of the year I was born and you get 111.
My sone was born in 1980, this year he will be 31. Add the last two digits of the year he was born and you get 111
My mother-in -law was born in 1926 and this year she will be 85. Add the last two digits of the year she was born and you get 111
My daughter was born in 1976 and this year she will be 35. Add the last two digits of the year she was born and you get 111

Interesting factoid. All you Math people out there let me know why this works, please.