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This Warm-up familiarizes students with the context of painting the walls of a room, which is used throughout this lesson. Students are given drawings of the four walls of a bedroom. They are prompted to think about what information they would need if they were to paint all the walls and buy the paint.
Display the drawings of the four walls for all to see. (If possible, provide access to a color version of the drawings to support students in making sense of the features of the room.) Read aloud the statement and the question (or invite students to do so). Give students 1–2 minutes of quiet think time.
Here are drawings of the four walls of a bedroom.
If you are asked to paint all the walls and buy enough paint for the job, what information would you need?
Invite students to share the information they would need and questions they would ask. Consider recording and displaying their responses for all to see. If any students have had experience painting a room, invite them to share any considerations that may be important but have not been mentioned.
Tell students that they will think more about the area to be painted, the necessary amount of paint, and the time needed to paint the walls of a bedroom.
Optional
In this activity, students apply their understanding of area from an earlier unit to find the total wall area to be painted. Later in the lesson, they will use this area to determine the amount of paint and the amount of time needed to apply two coats of paint.
To calculate the total wall area, students rely on a floor plan of a bedroom, a list of its features and measurements, and the drawings that show the view of each wall (from the Warm-up).
Because of the variations in the bedroom’s walls and features, keeping track of the shapes to be included or excluded from the area calculation may be challenging to students. For example, students may need to be reminded to:
As students work, notice those who organize their work methodically and those who may need organizational support.
Display the floor plan of the bedroom for all to see. Invite students to share what they know about floor plans. Clarify that it is a drawing that shows a view from above.
Next, display the drawings of the four walls, and direct students’ attention to features such as the door, window, and closet. Invite students to look at where or how each feature is represented in the floor plan. Give students a minute to identify correspondences across the two representations of the bedroom. Invite students to share their observations afterward. Consider color coding corresponding features in the two drawings as students explain.
Then read aloud the information in the task (or invite students to do so). Give students a minute to discuss their understanding of the task with a partner and to note anything they wish to clarify. Answer any questions that students might have.
Give students 6–8 minutes of quiet work time and then time to discuss their work with their partner. Encourage students to label the drawing of each wall with relevant measurements to support them in finding areas. Also urge them to organize their calculations so that all surfaces to be painted are accounted for and all non-painted surfaces are excluded.
MLR6 Three Reads. Keep books or devices closed. Display only the first sentence and the floor plan, without revealing other information about the room or the question. “We are going to read the given floor plan and information 3 times.”
Here is the floor plan for the bedroom that needs to be painted.
Here is some information about the room and the job:
How many square feet need to be covered with paint? Show your reasoning. Organize your work so that it can be followed by others.
Select a few students to share their strategies and solutions for the total wall area. If possible, record their calculations near the relevant parts of the drawings, and display them for all to see. Discuss any disagreements or questions about the calculations or approaches. Make sure that the class agrees on the total square feet before students proceed to think about the amount of paint and time needed for the job in upcoming activities.
In this activity, students apply their understanding of rates and percentages to determine the amount of paint needed to paint a bedroom, the costs for buying paint in different-size containers, and how discounts affect the costs. Students use the area found in the “All the Walls” activity as the basis for their calculation. If the class did not complete that activity, the total wall area (300 square feet) will need to be provided.
There are several combinations of can sizes that would be enough for two coats of paint on all the walls. Some students might consider the possibility of spills or errors and opt to buy a larger quantity. This is perfectly valid as long as students can support and explain their choices. In making assumptions and connecting calculations to real-life considerations, students practice modeling with mathematics (MP4).
Tell students that if they are painting the bedroom, they would need to determine how much paint is needed and how much it would cost. Remind students (or tell them, if they did not do the “All the Walls” activity) that the paintable wall area of the bedroom is 300 square feet.
Explain that paint can be purchased in 1-quart or 1-gallon containers. Ask students how the two units of volume relate to one another. If needed, remind students that there are 4 quarts in a gallon.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give students 5–6 minutes of quiet work time on the first two questions and then time to discuss their responses and reasoning with their partner. Then pause for a brief whole-class discussion.
Invite students to share some possible combinations of container sizes to purchase to have enough paint for the project. Make sure students recognize that the wall area of 300 square feet needs to be doubled because two coats of paint are required. Then ask students to share the cost of each option they mentioned.
Explain that hardware stores would sometimes have a sale on paint. Tell students that they will now look at how the paint costs would change when some discounts are applied. Give students a few minutes to work on the last question independently or with their partner.
Paint can be purchased in 1-quart or 1-gallon containers. The paint chosen for the room costs \$12 a quart and \$38 a gallon.
Which container sizes and how many could you buy to have enough paint for the room? Name at least two options.
Focus the discussion on how students found the amounts of savings in each option given the discounts. Invite several students or groups to share their approaches. Highlight strategies that allow for efficient computation of 20% and 30% of the original prices.
Make sure students see that the cheapest option after discount may vary, depending on which purchasing options students listed initially. (For example, if students listed 7 quart-size containers and 1 gallon container plus 3 quarts as two purchasing options, the latter would be the cheaper of the two. If they also included 2 gallon-size containers, this would be the cheapest after discount.)
Optional
In this activity, students solve problems about the amount of time to paint an area, using their understanding of ratio, rate, and percentage along the way. Each problem can be approached in a number of ways, giving students additional opportunities to model with mathematics (MP4).
The last question requires students to consider the rate of painting of one person, determine the time needed to complete the painting at that rate, and find the difference between that amount of time and 150 minutes (the time it takes 2 people to do the work). No scaffolding is given, prompting students to make sense of problems and persevere in solving them (MP1).
Keep students in groups of 2. Give students 2–3 minutes of quiet work time for the first question. Ask them to discuss their response and reasoning with their partner before moving on to the second question.
After buying the supplies, you start painting the east wall. It takes you 96 minutes to put two coats of paint on that wall (not including a lunch break between the two coats). A friend stops by to see how you are doing.
Your friend comments that you are 25% finished with the painting. Are they correct? Explain your reasoning.
Your friend offers to help you with the rest of the painting. It takes the two of you 150 more minutes of painting time to finish the entire room.
How much time did your friend save you? Show your reasoning.
Some students may use approximation when answering the first question (saying that the east wall does account for about 25% of the painting job), which would affect their calculations for the second question. Ask these students if the area of the east wall is exactly 25% of the total area. If they say that it is less than 25%, urge them to find out precisely how much less.
Invite students who thought their partner used a particularly efficient strategy on the first question to share. If most students reasoned that 3 square feet is 1% and then scaled it to 72 square feet to correspond to 24%, discuss how the problem can be solved more directly by calculating .
Then discuss the strategies used to answer the last question, in particular how students found the amount of painting time if they were painting the remaining walls on their own. Students are likely to start with one of two rates:
Select students who used each rate to share. If one of these rates is not mentioned, ask students to discuss how it might be used to solve the problem.