During the college bowl season (and the upcoming Super Bowl), engage your students with some real life math activities and discussions.
Activity Ideas:
- Plan a football themed party.
- Figure out all the income and expenses of organizing a bowl game.
- Predict the scores of games and figure out the averages and differences.
- Plan a tail gate party. Design the area and layout for tents, entertainment stages, vendors, port-potties, and eating areas.
- Look at statistics for a favorite player. Have students prepare a report explaining those statistics and compare them to other players on the team.
Discussion Ideas:
Multiples/Factors
Review the multiples of 7, to reflect the score of a typical touchdown. Talk about potential scores that are usually multiples of 7. If a score is 21, what are the factors as well?
Algebraic Thinking
If a team scores 4 touchdowns, we can represent by 4TD, which would be 24. If a score is 24, what are all the other possible equations? TouchDown (TD) = 6, Extra Point (EP) = 1, Two Point Conversion (TPC) = 2, Field Goal (FG) = 3, Safety (S) = 2.
Number Lines
Ask if your students saw any number lines while watching the game. (The markings along the long edge of the field.) Ask what is the purpose of a number line for football, what are the benchmark numbers along the football field. What do they represent? What do the hash marks represent? This line is also symmetrical, why?
Measurement
If a team advances the ball ten yards within four tries (downs), they receive a 1st down and can try again for another ten yards. How many feet is in ten yards? How many inches? Based on this information, estimate the length of a football field? FYI the width is 53 yards.
Fractions
What fractions did they hear or see during the a bowl game? (Quarters and Halves) Why are they called that? Also each quarter is 15 minutes, what fraction of an hour is that?
Time
The game has four 15 minute quarters and a 12 minute half time show. There is also a two minute break after the 1st and 3rd quarters for the teams to change sides. If there are no time outs (media or team), how much time is a complete game? What does a typical game run 3-4 hours? How many minutes is that?
Odd and Even
There are eleven players from each team on the field. Is that an even amount or odd amount of total players on the field? Does doubling an odd number make the total even? What about doubling an even number? Why?
Money
This has so many possibilities here. If a stadium holds 50,000 people and the average fan spends $15 on tickets, $10 on food, and $10 on souvenirs, how much will that be?
This is a start to all the possible math discussions you can have with your students! Help them understand that learning math is important, real, and fun!