The Mummy's Curse (18 page)

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Authors: Penny Warner

BOOK: The Mummy's Curse
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Chapter 11

Finger spelling:
Code Busters rule!

Chapter 12

Code Busters' glyph code:

I want a fake Eye of Horus

I liked being a mummy

Let's build a pyramid

Punkin is an Egyptian cat

Egyptian hieroglyphics:

We're going to Washington, DC!

Finger Spelling:

Chapter Title Translations

Chapter 1
Eye Spy

Chapter 2
A Puzzle within a Puzzle

Chapter 3
Thirteen Secrets

Chapter 4
Fakes and Forgeries

Chapter 5
An Eye for an
I

Chapter 6
Thirteen

Chapter 7
Time Is Running Out!

Chapter 8
The Stolen Eye

Chapter 9
The Thief Disappears!

Chapter 10
A Voice from Beyond

Chapter 11
The Mummy's Curse

Chapter 12
One Last Code

Suggestions for How Teachers Can Use the Code Busters Club Series in the Classroom

Kids love codes. They will want to “solve” the codes in this novel before looking up the solutions. This means they will be practicing skills that are necessary to their class work in several courses, but in a non-pressured way.

The codes in this book vary in level of difficulty, so there is something for students of every ability. The codes move from a simple substitution of words for letters—a phonetic alphabet code—to more widely accepted “code” languages such as Morse code and semaphore.

In a mathematics classroom, the codes in this book can easily be used as motivational devices to teach problem solving and reasoning skills. Both of these have become important elements in the curriculum at all grade levels. The emphasis throughout the book on regarding codes as
patterns
gives students a great deal of practice in one of the primary strategies of problem solving. The strategy of “Looking for a Pattern” is basic to much of mathematics. The resolving of codes demonstrates how important patterns are. These codes can lead to discussions of the logic behind why they “work” (problem solving). The teacher can then have the students create their own codes (problem formulation) and try sending secret messages to one another, while
other students try to “break the code.” Developing and resolving these new codes will require a great deal of careful reasoning on the part of the students. The class might also wish to do some practical research in statistics, to determine which letters occur most frequently in the English language. (
E
,
T, A, O
, and
N
are the five most widely used letters, and should appear most often in coded messages.)

This book may also be used in other classroom areas of study, such as social studies, with its references to Ancient Egypt and codes employed during wartime. This book raises questions such as “Why would semaphore be important today? Where is it still used?”

In the English classroom, spelling is approached as a “deciphering code.” The teacher may also suggest the students do some outside reading. They might read a biography of Samuel Morse or Louis Braille, or even the Sherlock Holmes mystery “The Adventure of the Dancing Men.”

This book also refers to modern texting on cell phones and computers as a form of code. Students could explain what the various “code” abbreviations they use mean today and why they are used.

—
Dr. Stephen Krulik

Dr. Stephen Krulik has a distinguished career as a professor of mathematics education. Professor emeritus at Temple University, he received the 2011 Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Thanks to Regina Griffin, Alison Weiss, Margaret Coffee, Michelle Bayuk, Katie Halata, Stefanie Von Borstal, Sara Sciuto, and Lily Ghahremani for all their expertise and assistance.

Thanks to Colleen Casey, Janet Finsilver, Staci McLaughlin, Ann Parker, and Carole Price for their insight and support.

And thanks to all the Code Busters Club members and fans for cracking all the codes!

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