Day 17: Squares & Square Roots | Stage Middle (6-8) Mathematics | Apex Institute of Maths and Sciences
Imagine a square floor made of tiles. If you know the total number of tiles, finding the number of tiles on one side is like finding the Square Root! It is the “reverse” of squaring a number.
Introduction to Cube Roots: Similarly, if $2 \times 2 \times 2 = 8$, then the cube root of $8$ (written as $\sqrt[3]{8}$) is $2$.
2. Long Division: Best for large numbers where factors are hard to find!
A gardener has 625 saplings and wants to plant them in a square grid (equal rows and columns). By calculating $\sqrt{625} = 25$, he knows he needs 25 rows!
A cubic box has a volume of $216\text{ cm}^3$. To find the length of one side, we find the cube root: $\sqrt[3]{216} = 6\text{ cm}$.
Find a square object at home (like a tile or a coaster). Measure one side. Multiply it by itself to find the “Area” and explain to your parents how the side is the square root of that area.
Write down squares of numbers from 1 to 15 on a paper. Decorate the perfect squares with a star and show them to your siblings!