Windham
Public Library was selected as one of six public libraries to start a Crazy 8s
club for children in grades three through five. The Crazy 8s club is an off
shoot of Bedtime Math, a program children’s librarian Laurel Parker was
introduced to with her work as youth services chair for the State of Maine.
The
library has held a few Bedtime Math parties, which incorporate math into
everyday situations, items and provide learning for people of all ages,
including adults.
“It’s
stuff that is so every day,” said Parker. One of the problems given at a party
was how long are the white passing lines on the road? And how long are the
spaces in between?” Questions like this provide quality time between families
as they research and figure out the answer. (They are 10 feet long and there is
30 feet between the white lines.)
The
program is not only about the parties at the library, but every night at 4 p.m.
the Bedtime Math app for smartphones sends out a math problem. The problem is
offered for wee ones, little ones, big kids and the sky’s the limit (for
adults). Once a week, they send out a math video, according to Parker.
Homeschooler
and mom Catherine Miller is facilitating the new Crazy 8s club with Parker. The
club is set to begin on Wednesday, January 15 and run through March 5, with
activities like bouncy dice explosion and toilet paper Olympics. There are 14
slots and they will fill up quickly, Parker said. This pilot program requests
that children sign up for the whole 8-weeks.
This
national initiative to encourage mental math on levels that fit everyone in the
family is unique.
“People
are getting together as a group to have fun with math,” said Parker. There is a
book on Amazon called, “Bedtime Math” filled with math riddles, and Parker
teaches a class for Windham-Raymond Adult Education. The class for adults is
February 4 from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. and it’s $9.
“Science
and math are everywhere,” said Parker. “We do most anything (at the library).
We need to get away from the book image. Libraries are the corner stones of
science. We help to encourage lifelong learning.”
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