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	<title>David M. Schwartz &#187; Popcorn</title>
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		<title>The Popcorn Factor</title>
		<link>http://davidschwartz.com/blog/the-popcorn-factor</link>
		<comments>http://davidschwartz.com/blog/the-popcorn-factor#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 29 Mar 2009 04:03:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>David</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Popcorn]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://davidschwartz.com/blog/?p=138</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I know how to get kids really excited about math. Show them popcorn. Lots of popcorn. It’s one of my math props when I speak at schools. I pull out bags of popcorn that grow by powers of ten from one to ten to one hundred to one thousand and so on. Are you wondering [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img style="margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px; width: 210px; cursor: hand; height: 320px; border: 0px;" title="One Million Pieces of Popcorn" src="/images/100,000_pieces_of_popcorn-reduced.jpg" border="0" alt="One Million Pieces of Popcorn" width="210" height="320" align="left" />I know how to get kids really excited about math. Show them popcorn. Lots of popcorn. It’s one of my math props when I speak at schools. I pull out bags of popcorn that grow by powers of ten from one to ten to one hundred to one thousand and so on. Are you wondering how big the bags get? That’s exactly what the kids are wondering, and they’re at the edge of their figurative seats waiting to find out (I say “figurative” because they’re usually sitting on the floor). Their growing excitement is abated only momentarily when I tell them they won’t get to eat my popcorn (and wouldn&#8217;t want to eat it because I popped it in 1985). They groan but immediately go back to screaming with delight as a bag of popcorn ten times larger than the last one appears before their eyes. </p>
<p>For years I’ve been using popcorn to demonstrate various math concepts as I act out the plot, if you can call it that, of <em><a href="http://davidschwartz.com/booksandbookimages/beyond.html">On Beyond a Million</a></em><span style="font-style: italic;">,</span> my powers-of-ten counting book. The popcorn almost never fails to excite children from grades K to 5 or 6, whether they are urban or rural, rich or poor, white or black, X or Y.  On several occasions I dropped the popcorn from my presentation, but I had to put it back because it’s so <span style="font-style: italic;">pop</span>ular. </p>
<p>The fact that 21st century children go wild over popcorn as a math prop encourages me wildly. Why? <span id="more-138"></span>Because popcorn is so simple. It isn’t a coveted, rare treat that they hardly ever get to see (or taste). They haven’t been barraged by commercials touting its pleasures. There’s nothing high-tech about my bags of
<a href="http://davidschwartz.com/blog/wp-content/gallery/ink_images/last-child-cover1.jpg" title="The recipient of the 2008 Audubon Medal, Richard Louv identified a phenomenon we all knew existed but couldn&amp;#039;t quite articulate: nature-deficit disorder. Since its initial publication, his book Last Child in the Woods has created a national conversation about the disconnection between children and nature, and his message has galvanized an international movement. Now, three years later, we have reached a tipping point, with the book inspiring Leave No Child Inside initiatives throughout the country." class="shutterset_singlepic1" >
	<img class="ngg-singlepic ngg-right" src="http://davidschwartz.com/blog/wp-content/gallery/cache/1__320x240_last-child-cover1.jpg" alt="last-child-cover" title="last-child-cover" />
</a>
 popcorn, and no special effects. There isn’t even an on/off switch. Yet kids love it because of the way the bags’ growth in size appeals to their senses and their emotions.</p>
<p>Much has been written recently about the current plugged-in generation that can’t have fun without electric outlets at hand and electronic devices in hand. Richard Louv’s best-selling book,<em><a href="http://richardlouv.com/last-child-woods" target="_blank">Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature Deficit Disorder</a></em>, sounds an alarm that children who are alienated from nature suffer in many psychological and physiological ways. Elementary school curricula may teach students all about the Amazon rain forest’s endangered species but do not encourage them to interact with the natural world outside their classroom, says Louv. That interaction, when it does occur, has a wealth of salubrious effects.</p>
<p>I am encouraged by the popcorn. If kids can get so excited about something as simple as my popcorn, then there is hope. For instance, if adults simply expose children to “nature play,” they will drink in the benefits.</p>
<p>Something else without an on-off switch comes to mind: books. In recent years, pundits have predicted death knells for the paper-and-ink variety of reading material but I don’t see it coming. Like big bags of popcorn, books are too much fun to hold and behold. They’re going to stick around for a while. Furthermore, as an author, I find the popcorn factor instructive. It says I can stick with the basics. By basics, I don’t mean what that word has come to mean in the politicized world of education and testing. I mean the basic and universal emotions and responses in children (shared by adults who haven&#8217;t lost the basics). One of the most valuable pieces of advice I ever got from an editor was in reference to a fiction manuscripts, <span style="font-style: italic;">Super Grandpa</span>, but I think it applies to non-fiction as well. This editor told me to “cut to the emotional core of the story.” The emotional core of powers of ten is that every time you add a zero to a number, it gets ten times bigger and that’s WAAAAAAAAAY bigger. “WAAAAAAAAAY bigger” is the emotional core. It’s exciting. If I can get to that in my readers  (or audience members),  I&#8217;ve reached them. Just pop up some corn and you’ll see what I mean.</p>
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