


Distance Throwing a Baseball - Mathematics outside the classroom: grades 4-10
1. Students will estimate and accurately record the distance of at least three ball throws using feet and inches with 100% completion of the outdoor and personal data sheets.
Measurement: Completed data sheets with properly formatted entries (e.g., feet and inches), verified by teacher observation.
2. Students will calculate the difference between two throwing distances using subtraction with at least 80% accuracy.
Measurement: Students will correctly compute and record the difference between two recorded throws (e.g., “Throw 2 – Throw 1 = Difference”), evaluated through notebook review or a follow-up worksheet.
3. Students will locate Greece and their hometown on a world map and explain one historical fact about the Ancient Greek Olympic Games with teacher-guided discussion or a short written response.
Measurement: Students complete a mapping activity and provide one correct historical fact (e.g., “Greek athletes trained by throwing the discus”), assessed through a classroom worksheet or discussion.
1. Students will estimate and accurately record the distance of at least three ball throws using feet and inches with 100% completion of the outdoor and personal data sheets.
Measurement: Completed data sheets with properly formatted entries (e.g., feet and inches), verified by teacher observation.
2. Students will calculate the difference between two throwing distances using subtraction with at least 80% accuracy.
Measurement: Students will correctly compute and record the difference between two recorded throws (e.g., “Throw 2 – Throw 1 = Difference”), evaluated through notebook review or a follow-up worksheet.
3. Students will locate Greece and their hometown on a world map and explain one historical fact about the Ancient Greek Olympic Games with teacher-guided discussion or a short written response.
Measurement: Students complete a mapping activity and provide one correct historical fact (e.g., “Greek athletes trained by throwing the discus”), assessed through a classroom worksheet or discussion.