Jenn Doing My Best

A daily blog of life reflections.

Patterns in the Garden

Published by

on

A trip to the local greenhouse turned into a math discovery as my five year old excitedly ran over to the flower baskets and exclaimed, “Look, Mommy! Patterns!”

Zaya has been learning about patterns in math, so she was amazed to find beautiful patterns on all of the flower petals.

For our homeschool math, we use Math with Confidence and living math books we check out from the public library.

Zaya’s discovery got the attention of her big brother, and soon they were both checking each flower basket to see how many more patterns they could find.

It brought me so much joy to see the kids make a connection between math and nature. 😊🌻

💜 XO

Fediverse Reactions

4 responses to “Patterns in the Garden”

  1. earthling Avatar

    @jenndoingmybest.blog

    Your five-year-old daughter spotting patterns on the flower petals at a local greenhouse is exactly how real-world #math should click for kids. It's a huge leap from standard workbook problems. It’s a great gateway to noticing other natural math concepts, like the Fibonacci sequence in sunflowers or the bilateral symmetry in orchids.

    It speaks volumes about the power of early exposure and the way #homeschooling can tailor learning to the real world.

    Like

    1. earthling Avatar

      @jenndoingmybest.blog
      2/
      For a long time, traditional schooling treated math as a linear ladder of arithmetic: learn to count, learn to add, memorize times tables, and move on to algebra. It was highly procedural.

      The shift to teaching patterning to five-year-olds is a relatively modern development in early childhood math education. Today, cognitive science recognizes that recognizing #patterns is the foundational bedrock of all higher-level math.

      #maths
      #education

      Like

      1. earthling Avatar

        @jenndoingmybest.blog
        3/
        Algebra is just the generalization of patterns.

        Calculus is the study of patterns of change.

        Geometry is the study of spatial patterns.

        When kids learn to see an alternating pink-and-white pattern on a petunia petal (an ABAB pattern), or notice the spiral scaling of a pinecone, they are training their brains to look for underlying rules and structures.

        #maths
        #education
        #children
        #nature
        #patterns

        Like

      2. earthling Avatar

        @jenndoingmybest.blog
        4/
        By the time a child taught this way reaches complex algebra, they don't just see a scary wall of x and y variables; they see a puzzle with a predictable rule. It turns math from a chore of memorization into a game of observation.

        #maths
        #education
        #patterns
        #children

        Like

Leave a comment