Thursday, March 15, 2012

(PI)E + (PI)ZZA = A CELEBRATION OF MATH

Millikan Middle School students enjoy pieces of pi: One pupil even won $314.15 by, well, disgorging 1,103 digits of the infinite number. It was all in the Sherman Oaks school's effort to encourage youngsters' appetite for math.

By Matt Stevens, Los Angeles Times | http://lat.ms/wyjQdQ

Pie on pi day

Dean Sherman Gardin takes a pie in the face from a student during Pi Day at Millikan Middle School in Sherman Oaks. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times / March 14, 2012)

 image California Schools Guide: Millikan Middle School

Just in time for Pi Day, pie sales emerging from a so-so year Just in time for Pi Day, pie sales emerging from a so-so year

Pi Day: Why are we transfixed by the delicious mystery of pi? Pi Day: Why are we transfixed by the delicious mystery of pi?

March 15, 2012 | On Wednesday, it was pie by the numbers in Sherman Oaks.

Teachers, parents and students at Millikan Middle School went all out to honor one of math's most famous numbers: pi, approximately 3.14.

Perfect timing, it being March 14.

To properly commemorate the infinite number, which represents the relationship between a circle's diameter and circumference, the school's Millikan Math Academy presented the third annual Pi Day.

Of course, there was a pie-eating contest. Pizza pies for lunch, anyone? Students even got to throw pies at the principal.

Naturally, there was math involved. Eighth-grader Sungmoo Scott Jeong, an academy student, won a contest by reciting pi's next 1,103 digits.

"I practiced every single day, three or four hours a day, for a week," Jeong, 13, said. "I really wanted to win this year."

Indeed. Last year, he recited more than 200 and came in third. His prize this time around: $314.15.

It took more than 100 parent volunteers and four math teachers to pull off the hourlong fundraising event. Michelle Tamasaki, who oversees the academy's 160 students, said that getting a teenager excited about math can be hard. Solution: fun and freebies, such as the 300 blue Pi Day T-shirts that were given to students who voluntarily memorized the first 50 digits of the number.

"This is a time where kids who are not good at math have a good time with a number," Tamasaki said. "They all get into it."

Jeong, who said he isn't sure about an exact career path yet, plans to keep pursuing the subject.

"There's something about math, something where you have to keep on solving things," he said. "When you get the right answer, it feels great."

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