FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. In their family's new house, Jenny, Jeff, and Jill use a simple geometry concept to calculate area and prove, once and for all, whose room is bigger.
I was one of those kids who talked all the time in class. I loved telling stories. One day in the 4th Grade, my teacher said, “You tell such good stories, maybe you should try writing some of them down.” “Wow,” I thought. “She thinks my stories are good.” That’s when I started to really enjoy writing.
I was also the class artist. When I wasn’t talking,I was drawing. When I was older, I studied art at the Rhode Island School of Design. That’s where I became interested in visual learning—how we decode and acquire information from graphs, charts, diagrams, models, illustrations and other images.
I became especially interested in educational publishing and have worked on the development of over a dozen major textbook programs, championing visual learning strategies from Pre-K through high school in every major curriculum area.
MATHSTART
The inspiration to write math stories for children was sparked by my work on a high school mathematics program. Visual learning strategies helped teens—who had been characterized as “reluctant learners’—understand difficult math concepts. Putting math in the context of stories based on their experiences made them feel more comfortable with abstract concepts. They actually became eager to apply math to real-life problems. If this approach worked for older students, I began to wonder what might happen if younger children were introduced to math this way!  Even before children can read—or speak many words—they can interpret visual information with ease. The MathStart books use simple stories coupled with diagrams, graphs and other visual models to teach everything from probability and pattern recognition to area, capacity and negative numbers.
The Best Bug Parade, (comparing sizes) was my very first published book. It was absolutely thrilling to see my name in print! I never expected that one day there would 63 MathStart books, split over three levels for ages Pre-K to Grade 4.
Each book includes two pages of review and activities designed to help teachers and parents extend learning beyond the story, along with suggestions of related books by other authors. After all, if a child enjoys learning math through stories, then let’s have more stories! (Pictures, Words & Math: An interview with Stuart J. Murphy )
THE MAIN STREET KIDS' CLUB: A MATHSTART MUSICAL
Now get out your dancing shoes—there is a musical based on six of the MathStart books! The Main Street Kids’ Club was workshopped at Northwestern University and adapted by Scott Ferguson, who also created the perennially popular production of Schoolhouse Rock Live! The songs are terrific. The math is spot on. And the club motto makes my heart sing: “Math Skills are Life Skills!”
STUART J. MURPHY'S I SEE I LEARN
My latest series of books is focused on young children—Preschool and Kindergarten age. I See I Learn books teach social, emotional, health and safety, and cognitive skills, such as how to make friends, build confidence, play safely, work together, manage emotions, and make plans. These skills are important for school readiness and for living happy, healthy, productive lives.  The stories “star” a wonderful bunch of friends who live in See-and-Learn City and attend Ready Set Pre-K. The cast includes Freda, Percy, Emma, Ajay, Camille, and Carlos. And, of course, Pickle, the green bull dog—who happens to have a soft-spot for butterflies—and Miss Cathy, their teacher.
I See I Learn stories are modeled on real-life situations and, just as in real-life, often involve more than one skill. For example, Freda Plans a Picnic is about sequencing, a cognitive skill, but the picnic itself is a social event. Percy Plays It Safe focuses on playground safety skills, but playing successfully in a group also requires self-regulation, an emotional skill.
Bigger, Better, Best is a math concept book that introduces the concept of area. I think this book would be appropriate for second or third graders.
This story is about a family of three children, Jill, Jenny, and Jeff. Jeff and Jenny always argue about who has the best of everything. The family moves into a new house; both Jenny and Jeff believe they have the biggest and best rooms. In order to see who has the best room, they each find the area of their windows to see which is larger. They are the same. Then they decide to find the area of their floors. After measuring, Jenny and Jeff realize their floors are the same as well. After all of the measuring took place, Jill announced that her room was in fact the best because it was not close to Jenny and Jeff's rooms.
Activities: 1. To further expand upon the concept of area, the students should get into groups and find the area of their classroom, the hallway, the teachers desk, their desks, etc. This book can be used both for a language arts lesson and a math lesson. 2. Have the students predict which room in their house has the greatest area. After making their predictions, the students should use paper, like Jeff and Jenny did in the story, to find the area of different rooms in their house. The student should determine which room is big, bigger, and the biggest.
This book offers a fun approach to geometry. The siblings in the story always argue about whose stuff is bigger and better, so their parents encourage them to use area to find out who has a bigger room, window, etc. The non traditional approach to area seen in this story can help students get a better understanding of what area actually means and how it can be applied to their lives. As with his other books, Stuart J. Murphy includes suggested activities in the back that could be used in a classroom. I think this book could be used in 2nd-5th grade, depending on whether it is being used as an introduction to area or a review of the concept.
When siblings Jill, Jenny, and Jeff move into a new house they all think they have the biggest and best room. In order to find out who really has the biggest room, they use geometry and measuring to find the area of each room. This story does a great job of making a somewhat challenging concept into something fun, easy to understand, and relatable. This book would be best suited for grades kindergarten through third. A great follow up lesson would be to have the students measure the area of two classrooms and see which is bigger.
As you read have the students count the number of pieces of paper to cover the windows and the floor in the illustrations. Have the students draw a shape on a piece of graph paper. Count the squares inside the shape to find the area. Draw a different shape with the same area.
Not only teaches the math principle of area (they use sheets of paper to cover windows and floors to see which are bigger), but also shows siblings fighting and learning to get along better.
This book is great for a lesson on area. The family is moving and they have to find area to see whose room is bigger. Jill shows another lesson that bigger isn't always better
This book teaches geometry and area. Students can compare items by their area. For an activity, students can compare small and large items in the classroom.