Mayan Interactive Games
Play Pitfall: The Mayan Adventure game on SNES online. Pitfall: The Mayan Adventure for Super Nintendo USA version free on Emulator Online. Mayan Mahjong, Mayan Mahjong free Game. Remove tiles by matching them in pairs.
Have students try these activities to expand their knowledge and interest in the Maya.
Social Studies, Art, Language Arts
To familiarize students with where the Maya lived, have them first locate Central America on a map or globe. Then have them locate Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, Belize, the Yucatán peninsula, and the Gulf of Mexico. Provide students with blank maps of Central America or have them draw their own maps. Students can then fill in the names of all the countries, their capitals, mountain ranges, major rivers, and the bodies of water surrounding Central America. Each student should then select one country in Central America and research the current population, crops, important products exported, and so on.
Language Arts, Art
Have students try their hand at creating hieroglyphs of their own. To start, they should study the hieroglyphs shown in Math, Science, Writing and Art and in Uncovering the Secrets of the Maya. Students can then give themselves appropriate Maya-like nicknames that can be shown in picture form, such as Jeweled Skull or Jaguar. They can draw the hieroglyphic and show the class, explaining why they selected their nickname. Students should then use pictures to make a sentence and create a key showing what each hieroglyph means. Have students trade papers and keys and try to decipher the sentences.
Math
Have students use the information in Math, Science, Writing and Art to learn how the Maya wrote large numbers. After writing a few practice numbers as a class, give students a large number, such as 2,798, and ask each student to try to write it the Maya way. Have students compare what they wrote. Then write a number using the Maya method and challenge students to determine what the number is. Encourage students to challenge each other with similar problems.
Science, Math
As explained in Math, Science, Writing and Art , the Maya accurately calculated the number of days it takes Venus to travel around the sun—approximately 584 days. Have students research and make a class list of how long it takes other planets to travel around the sun. Have students make up word problems using the information from the chart, such as “How much longer does it take Venus to travel around the sun than it takes Earth?” or “Which planet takes the longest time to travel around the sun?”
Social Studies, Language Arts
Rigoberta Menchú won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1992. Have students develop questions they want to know about the Nobel Peace Prize. List the questions on the board. For example, students may want to know what the prize is for, when it was first awarded, who awards the prize, who has received the award and why, and what the actual prize looks like. Then students can research the answers. Ask students to discuss some current people who they feel deserve the award.
Games and Activities on the Maya Kids Discover
By Added Jan 14, 2016
Image: 'Detail of Codex Dresdensis drawn by Lacambalam' by Lacambalam - Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 via Commons.
We admit—we were pretty excited when we found this awesome Mayan math game, courtesy of the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian!
The Mayans were an ancient civilization that lived in Central America from about 2000 BC til as recently as the 1600s! They developed a numerical system that allowed them to express very large numbers and perform complex calculations by utilizing only three symbols to represent numbers. A dot represents 1, a bar represents 5, and a shell represents 0! Below are the numbers 0 to 19:
(Image:'Maya' by Bryan Derksen - Image:Maya.png. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons.)
Game Maya Dramacool
The Mayans utilized a vigesimal, or base-20 number system (in contrast, we use a decimal number system, or base-10). Numbers after 19 were written in a vertical place value format using powers of 20 (source). While we think of place value in terms of ones, tens, hundreds, etc., the Mayans' place value system went from the ones to the twenties to the four-hundreds, and so on!
As an example, check out the number 65 in the image below. The three dots on the second tier represent 60 (3 x 20 = 60), and the single bar on the bottom tier represents 5.
(Image: 'Maya numbers 63-100' by Immanuel Giel - Own work. Licensed under Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.)
Click here to get your feet wet and play around with Mayan math. Once you're ready, click here to play the game! Have fun!