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Contests...

Hold a classroom or
school-wide contest for
the recitation of the most digits from memory. Offer a free pizza
pi(e) to the winner.
»»»» You should expect the winner to memorize
about 30 or 40 digits, but every once in a while, a student like Gaurav
Raja (Roanoke, VA) comes along. He's up to a whopping 10,980, finally
securing the North American record.
»»»» Keep records from year to year, as a Pi Day Hall of Fame,
and notify your class of the all-time school best.

Hold a Pi Trivia Game, challenging students to find answers
either in handout packets or the Internet on the history and uses of pi.
»»»» Students at Holy Angels School in Dayton, OH
took part in the 3.14 Trivia Game, where students looked for answers
about pi mathematicians, and uses of the number in nature, art, and
architecture.

Hold a pie-baking contest, where students and teachers bake and
submit pies to a panel of judges, maybe drawn from the community.
Raise money for a charity or your math club by selling the remaining
slices of each pie.
»»»» Teachers at Schroeder M.S. in Grand Forks, ND
raised $125 for their local Humane Society through a Pi Day pie bakeoff
they called the "Power of Pie" contest. Judging of the 22 pies was done
by the newspaper's food editor, and a few community leaders. Aside from
the overall winners, ribbons were also given to the Best Presentation
and Ugliest Pie.

Dress up like birthday-boy Albert Einstein on Pi Day, and
encourage students to do so, too. Or, use your imagination and dress
as Pi… yes, it's been done.
»»»» As with everything else, you can make it a
costume contest… The prize: a pie inscribed with E=mc2?
Hold an instant-memory
challenge for those who haven't learned any of the number by heart.
Ask for a student volunteer. As in the "Simon" game, have the student
parrot back the number after you say it, adding one more digit each
time, until they make a mistake.
»»»» You: "3.1415926."
Student: "3.141595...6?" You: "Oops! Nice job, you made it seven
digits. Next!"
»»»» Your class will be shocked as to how many digits they all know,
after five or ten of them take the challenge.

In your Pi Day memorization contest, keep records from year to year,
and notify your class of the all-time school best. Give a prize (a
little pie?) to everyone who learns at least 40 digits, and something
special (a big pizza?) to anyone who breaks the school record.
»»»» 401 digits was the record as of Pi Day '05 at
Notre Dame H.S. in Elmira, NY.
»»»» Allow students to strive to become permanent members of different
"clubs." For example:
Ratio Reciters (5-20 digits)
Irrationals (21-50)
Transcendentals (51 and up).

If students participate in at least 75 percent of Pi Day
activities, allow them to throw a cream pie at you.
»»»» "I'm smelling like cream for three or four
days," says teacher Tom Bronson of Independent Day School in Tampa, FL.

Divide your class into teams, and track their group scores as they
compete in a series of Pi Day events. Award team and individual
medals (or pies, or other round treats).
»»»» Student teams at the Montgomery Academy wore
colors to match their pie-themed team names, such as "The Banana
Creams," "The Key Limes," and "The Oreos." They faced off in speed math
tests, Pi Bingo, brain teasers, and computer games.

Hold a hula-hoop contest, as part of the festivities in an
assembly or lunchtime Pi Day event. Hey, they're circular!
»»»» St. Scholastica Academy in New Orleans, LA
held a Pi Day hula contest, perhaps to burn off the calories from the
Moon Pies everyone was given during first period.

Stage a relay race, in which participants run from one station to
the next, answering Pi trivia or math questions at each stop.
»»»» Fredonia State College in Fredonia, NY calls
this one-hour activity "Le Tour de Pi."

Compile a recipe book of pies and desserts, from parents and
colleagues, and hold an art contest for a pi-themed book cover.
Encourage the recipe donors to bring in actual examples!
»»»» Arlington M.S. in Poughkeepsie, NY turned
this recipe book project into a charitable one: 90 homemade pies,
quiches, and pizzas (with accompanying recipes) were donated to a local
food shelf.

Challenge students to bring in at least 314 cans of food per
grade level. If they do, let them hit you with a pie!
»»»» That's how Paris Gibson M.S. in Great Falls,
MT was able to collect more than 1,700 cans on one recent Pi Day.

Hold a pie speed-eating contest at an assembly, or during each
lunch period in the cafeteria. It's best under "no hands allowed" rules.
Teachers versus students, perhaps?
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