"The Grasshopper and the Ant" teach Exponents

What do you notice, what do you wonder when you see this image?



It looks cold, how do you know which one is the ant? Which one is the grasshopper? Which one looks warmer? How do you think the discussion is going?

Next have the students read the fable that is associated with it:

A Grasshopper gay Sang the summer away,
And found herself poor By the winter's first roar.
Of meat or of bread, Not a morsel she had!
So a begging she went, To her neighbour the ant,
For the loan of some wheat, Which would serve her to eat,
Till the season came round. "I will pay you," she saith,
"On an animal's faith, Double weight in the pound
Ere the harvest be bound." The ant is a friend
(And here she might mend) Little given to lend.
"How spent you the summer?" Quoth she, looking shame
At the borrowing dame. "Night and day to each comer
I sang, if you please." "You sang! I'm at ease;
For 'tis plain at a glance, Now, ma'am, you must dance."

What do you notice? What do you wonder now?

Where math comes in to play is the idea of where the grasshopper says, "I will pay you, she saith,
On an animal's faith, Double weight in the ." When you can't afford something say, the full price of a car, how do you afford it?  Most students will talk about saving money or a loan. If the grasshopper wants to survive, she wants a cut of the ants food savings and next season the grasshopper will give double back. Ask your students is this fair? Is this how a bank works?

There is a way to calculate it mathematically, but right now I want students getting use to the idea of exponents. The equation I would have them use is the compound interest equation.

A=P(1+r/n)^(nt)

Where A is the amount
P is the principle
r is the interest rate
n is the number of times it is compounded per year
t is the time in years.

I would have students think about what each of them means and how the rate effects how much the grasshopper would way in the long run.

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