Pi Day at Sierra Bonita Elementary in Nebo School District

Submitted by lana.hiskey on
Photo: Braelynn Nelson, Bentley Garns, Mrs. Amy Van Dyke, Steven Carter
National Pi Day

Just one of the many Pi Day stories in Nebo School District. Sierra Bonita Elementary in Spanish Fork Utah, the STEM/Music Specialty teacher, Mrs. Amy Van Dyke, has put on a Pi digit competition for the last four years for the third, fourth and fifth graders. This fun competition inspired kids to memorize as many pi digits as they could to earn a pie.  The top winners get a large pie and a little pie of their choice, and the other participants who memorize a base amount per grade get a small pie - 30 digits for third grade, 40 digits for fourth grade and 50 digits for fifth grade.  Around 30-40 kids participate each year.

Mrs. Van Dyke spent the first two weeks of March in STEM class doing activities with Pi and circles. The younger grades (K-3) do art and activities and inventions with circles, pies, and fractions of those things. The older grades (4-5) actually learn what pi is, where it comes from, and what circumference and diameter mean, etc. The students investigate those things and the history of Pi Day. Mrs. Van Dyke is one of those special teachers that goes the extra mile, knows how to make everything fun, and inspires kids to enjoy learning and doing something they would have never done without her challenging them.

This year for the competition, Bentley Garns, a fifth grader, recited a whopping 527 digits of pi to Mrs. Van Dyke, winning the competition for the third year in a row.  His older sister, Londyn Garns, won the first year they did it by reciting 163 digits of pi and inspired Bentley to want to win the competition the next year. The sibling rivalry began.  Bentley won the next year with 326 digits as an 8-year-old in third grade with Londyn a 10-year-old in fifth grade, trailing at 231 for second place. Then last year as a fourth grader, Bentley recited 401, and this year 527, though he is able to recite 601 which he recorded doing at home.

The record that we can see online is around 285 for a 10-year-old, and Bentley is able to do 601 if you include the 3 in 3.14.  This puts him in the pi world ranking at 295th place as recorded in www.pi-world-ranking-list.com.

We love Mrs. Van Dyke for making pi day an exciting thing for kids at Sierra Bonita Elementary. Without her, the Garns’ kids would not have even thought about memorizing pi, let alone trying to memorize 600 digits.

The Second and Third Place Winners for this year got 120 digits and 116 digits which is also amazing!  We appreciate Amy Van Dyke for inspiring kids to push themselves in fun ways.

#PiDay #TheClimb #NeboHero #NeboSchoolDistrict #StudentSuccess #EmpowerStudents #EngageStudents #FocusOnStudents #LoveUTpublicSchools #UtPol #UtEd #ThankATeacher #LoveTeaching #SierraBonita

Attributions
By Lana Hiskey