Just Do It! Nike, DynaMath, and a Fun Subtraction Lesson

A Texas 5th grade teacher relates real-world math to a new Nike sneaker

Victoria J. Dixon

Texas 5th graders review math content to get ready for the new school year.

This year, my classroom theme is "Math in Real Life Matters."  Each week, my goal is to help students connect the math they learn to where they may see it in the real world.

DynaMath is a wonderful tool in my toolbelt. For example, I love this article from the September issue about a new Nike shoe design.

It fits perfectly with my classroom because we’re tracking Nike’s stock price this year in our stock market simulation, and we have a mural of Nike in the classroom.

Victoria J. DIxon

Coloring Activity: Design Your Own Sneaker

I like referring to DynaMath’s lesson plans for their discussion questions. For the Nike article, the lesson plan suggests asking students to think about how they would design a pair of tennis shoes.

I took this suggestion a step further and gave my students a few moments to actually design a shoe. I had a number of students focus on the artistic aspects of design, while others focused on increased functionality.

Finding online math support

After the sneaker activity, we read the article online (though students were also able to follow along in their magazines). The DynaMath website is great because we can watch the videos as well. For example, my students loved this video (above) about how Nike tested their shoes.

Math videos and follow up activities

Though I teach 5th grade, I do not assume that all students have the necessary prerequisite skills at the beginning of the school year. So I also had my students watch the Subtraction Strategies video (above), which includes a few mental math strategies for subtraction.

Then I facilitated a follow-up activity, where students worked with a partner to answer the questions from the article using the strategies they watched in the video.

Save time and don’t reinvent the wheel!

As a math teacher, I want my lessons to engaging, relevant, and still effective. With DynaMath I save time because I don’t have to reinvent the wheel. They are so much more than a printed magazine for students to read independently. 

Share your ideas for using DynaMath in the classroom by sending us an email!

Want more elementary math education tips and news? Check out Scholastic's archive.

Victoria J. Dixon is a 5th grade math teacher in Texas, with experience teaching grades 3 through 6. She loves math and works to make student learning relevant, engaging, and meaningful.

Exciting ideas and fun teaching strategies for using DynaMath in 3rd, 4th, and 5th grade math classrooms

Text-to-Speech