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The Land of Inch can only be visited very late at night by pressing on the castle's door.
Our teacher, Liz, has visited once to get our new measuring tools from Princess Funer. |
The Land of Inch is far, far away. In this miniature land, there is a beautiful (and brilliant) princess who lives in a castle with her father, the king. One day, the king asked that all of the athletes in the land see who could jump the farthest. Unfortunately, all of the athletes measured their jumps with different units. Some measured using blocks, others with sticks, some with their feet, and others with pieces of paper. No one knew who won because they couldn't compare the distances!
Then Princess Funer noticed a pile of bricks by the castle door. She had all of the athletes jump again and they all measured their jumps with bricks. They could now see who the winner was because they were using a standard measuring tool.
The people of the Land of Inch loved this and started carrying bricks with them all of the time to help them measure things. Soon, though, they realized that bricks are heavy and lots of people were complaining of aching backs. So, Princess Funer decided to trace the bricks on paper and give out pieces of paper that were the same size as bricks - but were a lot lighter to carry. She called these papers "Inch Bricks" because they lived in the Land of Inch.
We used Inch Bricks yesterday to measure the long jumps. One miniature jumper had a jump as long as a pencil. Another had a jump as long as a sheet of paper. Yet another jumper had a jump as long as our pencil bins. The fourth jumper had a jump as long as the width of a sheet of paper. We used Inch Bricks to see who won.
One student, though, voiced a complaint. He said using Inch Bricks was difficult because you had to be careful not to overlap bricks or leave spaces between bricks and you had to be sure they were exactly straight to get the right measurement. We brought this complaint to Princess Funer and she used magical glue to create Inch Brick Measuring Tools. She glued 12 of the Inch Bricks together in a straight row so that it was easier to measure.
Today we used that Inch Brick Measuring Tool to measure the sizes of clothing the king and his subjects wear. We also compared them - how much shorter is Kip's jacket compared to the king's robe? What about Nap's sweater compared to Kag's knee socks?
Tomorrow we will help the king measure his gardens. They're quite big -- bigger than our Inch Brick Measuring Tools. We'll have to come up with a solution for that problem.
On Friday we will be using our Inch Brick Measuring Tools to create accurate maps of the Land of Inch. Stop by the hallway outside of room 205 to see what we're doing to help the Land of Inch!