Upon completing all tasks, the "Golden Compass" (a chocolate coin or a certificate) is returned to the King.
Students are given half of a complex shape (like a castle silhouette) and must draw its reflection across a line of symmetry. They must also identify acute, obtuse, and right angles within the structure to "lock" it in place. The Cave of Great Measures (Measurement & Estimation)
Convert measurements to solve the recipe: Add 3 liters and 450 milliliters of water to 2,000 grams of stardust (converted to kilograms). The Tower of Logic (Word Problems & Fractions) 4 klass vneklassnye meropriiatiia po matematike
To pass, the Knights must find all the factor pairs of 48. Then, they must solve a "Log-Splitting" problem: If there are 1,248 logs to be moved by 4 wagons equally, how many logs go on each wagon? The Bridge of Symmetry (Geometry)
The Gnome is at the top of the tower. He throws down "Fraction Stones" to block the stairs. Upon completing all tasks, the "Golden Compass" (a
Students must compare fractions to find the "heaviest" stone (e.g., Is 3/4 or 5/8 larger? ) and solve a final multi-step word problem: The King had 5,000 gold coins. He spent 1/5 on a new map and 1,200 on supplies. How many coins are left? Implementation Tips for Teachers
Use Fairy Tale STEM ideas to have students physically build the "Bridge of Symmetry" using blocks or straws. The Cave of Great Measures (Measurement & Estimation)
For a 4th-grade extracurricular math activity (vneklassnoe meroprijatie), using a "Mathematical Fairy Tale" is an engaging way to combine storytelling with complex 4th-grade concepts like multi-digit operations, geometry, and logical reasoning.