Why do this
problem?
This
problem can help to give learners an understanding of the
difference between a steady and an increasing rate of growth. It
could be used when looking at number patterns especially doubling,
putting them in a real context, and can be used to demonstrate the
use of tables in problem solving. It will also be fascinating for
you as the teacher to see how children represent the problem as
they work on it.
Possible approach
You could start this problem as a whole class activity by
introducing the growth rate of other plants as examples. (These
plants could be real or imagined!) For example:
"There is a plant that is $3$ centimetres tall. If it grows
$4$ centimetres a day how tall will it be the next day?" "And the
day after that?" And so on ...
Then you can introduce a different type of example:
"There is a plant that is $5$ centimetres tall. If it doubles
in height each day how tall will it be the next day?""And the day
after that?" And so on ...
Then a new question needs to be asked to help in approaching
the problem as written. For example:
"It starts at $5$ centimetres and is $10$ centimetres the next
day. How much has it grown?"
"If it grows double that the next day, how tall will it
be?"
You could then ask learners to do the given problem in pairs
and encourage them to use anything they like to help them with the
solution. Some may draw pictures and use numbers, some may make a
list, some may use multilink to physically represent the plants,
some will be able to make a table of the results, others may be
happier if given
this
sheet of a table to be completed.
Key questions
At what height did the bean start?
How tall was it the next day?
How much did it grow by the next day? So how tall would it be
that day?
And the day after that?
At what height did the tomato start?
How tall would it be on the second day? And the day after
that?
Possible extensions
Learners can be encouraged to open out this activity further by
considering plants that increase their rate of growing by
trebling/quadrupling the growth each year. Each year's height could
be calculated and learners can see what happens.
Doubling goes:- $1$, $3$, $7$, $15$, $31$, $63$ ...
Trebling goes:- $1$, $4$, $13$, $40$ ...
Quadrupling goes, $1$, $5$, $21$, $85$ ...
To open this problem out further, children may like to explore
the digital roots of the numbers in their results.
This sheet gives some
suggestions as to how this might be done.
Possible support
Suggest using
this
sheet and filling in first the days ($1$-$8$) and the heights
on the first day. The bean's growth is easier to work out than the
tomato's so this can be tackled next.