Thursday, June 4, 2015

Beha'alotcha- Mixed Bag of activity suggestions

In this week's parsha, there were a number of smaller activity ideas that caught my attention. Different activities apply to different learning levels, and some are more easily modified up or down for varying age learners. Below I've listed each passage pertaining to the activities, with the specific activity ideas summarized directly below the applicable passage.
"Hashem spoke to Moshe, in the Wilderness of Sinai, in the second year from their exodus from the land of Egypt, in the first month, saying: 'The Children of Israel shall make the pesach-offering in its appointed time. On the fourteenth day of this month in the afternoon shall you make it, in its appointed time; according to all its decrees and according to all its laws shall you make it.' Moshe spoke to the Children of Israel to make the pesach-offering. They made the pesach-offering in the first [month], on the fourteenth day of the month, in the afternoon, in the Wilderness of Sinai; according to everything that Hashem had commanded Moshe, so the Children of Israel did." ~Bamidbar 9:1-5
"In the second month, on the fourteenth day, in the afternoon, shall they make it; with matzot and bitter herbs shall they eat it." ~Bamidbar 9:11 
  • Calendar activity- In the above passage we are given dates for when the Israelites first offered the pesach offering in the desert, and then when they offer the secondary pesach offering for anyone who was impure at the time of the first offering. Using a calendar, students can map out the dates given in this passage, and they can also compare them to the dates listed on modern-day Jewish calendars to make the connection between the dates listed in the passage and the dates on which we now celebrate Pesach and Pesach Sheni. 
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"Hashem spoke to Moshe, saying, 'Make for yourself two silver trumpets- make them beaten out, and they shall be yours for the summoning of the assembly and to cause the camps to journey. When they sound a long blast with them, the entire assembly shall assemble to you, to the entrance of the Tent of Meeting. If they sound a long blast with one, the princes shall assemble to you, the heads of Israel's thousands. When you sound short blasts, the camps resting to the east shall journey. When you sound short blasts a second time, the camps resting to the south shall journey; short blasts shall they sound for their journeys. When you gather together the congregation, you shall sound a long blast, but not short blasts. The sons of Aaron, the Kohanim shall sound the trumpets, and it shall be for you an eternal decree for your generations.'" ~Bamidbar 10:1-8
  • Codes- The above passage gives directions for Moshe to make two silver trumpets and use different combinations of blasts to indicate different messages to the groups of Israelites. Students could first map out the different blasts and what they indicate- long blasts? short blasts? combinations of long and short? number of each type of blast? Younger students could role play having the teacher sound a trumpet or call out a sound in a certain way and following different directions (move to the front of the room, sit down in a circle, sit down at the project tables,...) based on the sounds made. Older students could use this as a launching point into a discussion of other coding that is used- morse code, for example- and create a code of their own to then share with the group.
*****
"Moshe said, 'Six hundred thousand foot soldiers are the people in whose midst I am, yet You say I shall give them meat, and they shall eat for a month of days!...'" ~Bamidbar 11:21 
  • Rounding numbers & Comparing numbers- Rashi on this passage wrote about how when Moshe is complaining about having to provide meat for the Israelites after they complained about the manna, he lists the foot soldiers at an even 600,000 men, yet when we read about the census in Bamidbar 1:46, there were 603,550 soldiers counted. What happened? 
    • Rashi offers 2 explanations: 
      1. Moshe was not focused on the detail of the specific numbers. Thinking about it, this makes sense- when you are upset or excited about something, you are focused on the big picture or larger situation, not the very specific details.
        • Students can talk about how we round numbers mathematically. Find the greatest place value that we want to round to, and then look at the next smaller place value. If the number in that place is 5 or greater, then we round our desired place value up by one number; if the number in that place is 4 or less, then we round down by keeping our desired place value at its current number. In Moshe's excitement, did he round accurately according to the rules of mathematics?
      2. Moshe was only referring to the men who left Egypt, who were the ones who complained, since only those who left Egypt had something to compare their experience to and say that this was worse.
        • Students can refer back to Shemot 12:37 to compare the numbers. Students can calculate that, based on this comparison, there were therefore 3,550 men who were born and raised in the desert.
*****
"Moshe left and spoke the words of Hashem to the people; and he gathered seventy men from among the elders of the people and had them stand around the tent. Hashem descended in a cloud and spoke to him, and He set aside some of the spirit that was upon him and gave it to the seventy men, the elders; when the spirit rested upon them, they prophesied, but did not continue to do so. Two men remained behind in the camp, the name of one was Eldad and the name of the second was Medad, and the spirit rested upon them; they were of those who had been written, but they had not gone out of the Tent, and they prophesied in the camp." ~Bamidbar 11:24-26
  • Probability- In the passage above, Hashem instructed Moshe to gather 70 elders to help in the spiritual guidance of the Israelites. Rashi explains that there were supposed to be 6 elders from each tribe (12 x 6 = 72) who were to gather and draw lots. The lots would indicate 70 spiritual leaders and 2 who were not able to attain prophetic status. Eldad and Medad, however, assumed that they would not achieve prophetic status, so they did not join the group. When the lots were drawn, 2 of the present elders drew blank lots, and the lots for Eldad and Medad were left undrawn. A few questions to begin thinking about this statistically:
    • What was the probability of each elder drawing a prophetic lot? What was their probability of drawing a blank lot? 
    • Was their probability changed in any way by Eldad and Medad abstaining from drawing lots? 
    • What percentage/fraction of the elders achieved prophetic status? What percentage/fraction of the elders did not achieve prophetic status?

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