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Date: Fri 17-Nov-1995

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Date: Fri 17-Nov-1995

Publication: Bee

Author: AMYD

Quick Words:

school-Head-O-Meadow-food

Full Text:

w/3col.photo: Head o Meadow Food Drive

B Y A MY D'O RIO

Head O'Meadow School's food drive does more than provide canned goods for the

needy.

The teachers are using the drive as food for thought.

Along with a lobby display encouraging the children to bring in food items,

Head O'Meadow has a blackboard sporting a question du jour.

On Monday, the first day of the drive, children were asked: If every

kindergartner and first-grader brought in one item, every second-grader

brought in two, every third-grader brought in three, every fourth-grader

brought in four and every fifth-grader brought in five, how many items would

each class contribute? How many items would each grade contribute?  . . . "

On Tuesday, the teachers put all the food packaged in cardboard into a big

pile and asked students to estimate how many items were there.

Students handed in their answers to their teachers.

Teacher Al Washicko said he has been requiring students to answer the

questions as part of their math work.

He has also been connecting regular math assignments to the food drive.

Students in his class have been graphing the daily rate of donations.

While he is putting the food drive to good academic use, Mr Washicko has not

forgotten its main purpose. One homework assignment was to bring in four food

items from home to donate to the food pantry.

Teacher Gail Diminico has been bringing her kindergartners to the food drive

set-up for math activities.

One day, the children sorted the donations by size, food type, shape and

packaging.

Another day, they estimated how many food items were in a basket. They then

counted to see if the estimates were right.

On Wednesday, the students picked out the most popular food item being donated

and drew a picture of it.

The students drew pictures of their favorite food within the donation pile and

a food they had never tasted.

The children are learning basic math concepts with the canned beans and boxes

of rice, but they are also learning about where the food goes and why it is

being donated, Ms Diminico said.

The food drive for the local food pantry is running until Friday, November 17.

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