AP2 Iced Tea, Please
Cha, D ōzo!
In Japan, children and adults drink hot tea with their meals. Is that true for your family?
Help your class conduct a survey of what their families drink. Choose one day. List all the beverages that every person in your home drinks that day. Your list might include hot tea, iced tea, coffee, hot chocolate, milk, soda, fruit juice, juice drinks (juice plus other ingredients), sports drinks, smoothies, wine, beer, and water.
Use this chart to record who drinks what in your home.
Name | Breakfast | Lunch | Dinner | Between Meals | Before Bed |
Combine your data with the data from your classmates. Make a bar graph together to show your results.
Analyze your data. Do you see any patterns? What drink is most popular at different times of the day? What age person (baby, child, teen, parent, grandparent) is most likely to drink it?
Are there special beverages that only one or two families drink? Talk about why that might be.
Lesson Plan: Beverage Survey
Target Grade: 3
Standards of Learning
Math 3.21 and 3.22
Overview
Students survey their families and use data to generate a bar graph that displays what their families drink.
Objective
Students will collect, organize, and analyze data.
Students will construct a bar graph to represent their results.
Essential Question
What drinks are most popular in the homes of local school children?
Management
- Two class sessions with a week interval
- Class collaboration
Materials
- Grid-lined poster board
- Calculators
Preparation
Photocopy an Iced Tea, Please! survey (AP #2) for each student.
Activity
Check the students’ sentences for accuracy.
Variations
- Have students survey the drink preferences of all children and staff in your school. Create a bar graph that shows the results for the whole school. Then have children work in small groups to create bar graphs that show the drinking preferences for each grade level (and a separate graph for adult staff).
- Have an international cold beverage tasting party in your classroom. Have students choose their favorite beverage, then organize and graph this data. Include a popular drink from Japan!
Printable forms of these documents: AP2 Iced Tea Please and Lesson Plan: Beverage Survey
Tea in a Box © 2007, Washington and Lee University
Japanese Tearoom
Contact Info
- P: 540-458-8936
-
Senshin'an Tearoom
Professor Janet Ikeda
c/o Dept of East Asian Languages and Literatures
Washington and Lee University
Lexington, Virginia 24450
Location
- P: 540-458-8034
-
Watson Galleries
Washington and Lee University
Hours: Contact the Reeves Museum of Ceramics