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Students have experienced measuring short distances with a ruler or a measuring tape. In this activity, students start to think about how they can measure longer distances over uneven terrain. This activity is intended to set the stage for the upcoming activities, not to completely resolve the question. Students have an opportunity to think about the limitations of methods that may work for short distances but not for long distances. They also consider real-world situations that involve the measurement of long distances.
Arrange students in groups of 3–4. They will stay in these groups throughout this four-lesson section. Ask students how they have measured the length of objects in school (with a ruler, yardstick, or measuring tape). Where else in real life do people measure distances, especially longer ones? Brainstorm some situations together (distance driven in a car, length of a garden fence, length of a hiking trail, etc.). Give students 2–3 minutes of quiet work time, followed by small-group discussion.
How do people measure distances in different situations? What tools do they use? Come up with at least three different methods and situations where those methods are used.
In the previous activity, students started to think about how to measure distances in different situations. The activity introduces the context of designing a course for a 5K fundraising walk. Students will continue working with this context in future lessons. In this activity, they come up with a method for measuring the walking distance of a path that is too long to measure with a measuring tape. As students select appropriate strategies to measure distances, they have the opportunity to consider the limitations and benefits of each tool when measuring (MP5).
Keep students in the same groups. Provide access to measuring tools, such as yardsticks, meter sticks, and tape measures. Ask students if they have ever been in or watched a walk-a-thon or a race. Explain that sometimes a race is done by repeating a shorter course several times, for example, a mile is about 4 laps around a track. For this activity, they should plan for a course that is about 500 meters long that walkers can go around multiple times.
Give students 5–6 minutes to work with their group.
Check in with each group about their method of measurement. When they have a plan that they understand, they can move to the next activity.
In this activity, students use the method they came up with in the previous activity to measure the length of a path chosen by the teacher.
In this group activity, students take turns sharing their initial ideas and first drafts. As students trade roles explaining their thinking and listening, they have opportunities to explain their reasoning and critique the reasoning of others (MP3). As students revise their writing, they have an opportunity to attend to precision in the language they use to describe their thinking (MP6).
It is not important that students’ results are very accurate. They will measure the distance again with a trundle wheel in a later lesson. The main point of this activity is to think about measurement methods and to discuss the advantages and disadvantages of different methods.
Keep students in the same groups. Provide access to measuring tools. Show students the path they should measure. Give students time to measure with their group. Each group can begin working on this activity as soon as they have finished the previous activity and checked in with the teacher.
If a group finishes this activity early, consider asking them to compare their results with additional groups.
Let’s see how close different measuring methods are to each other. Your teacher will show you a path to measure.
Use Stronger and Clearer Each Time to give students an opportunity to revise and refine their response to the last question, about the advantages and disadvantages of each group’s method. In this structured pairing strategy, students bring their first draft response into conversations with 2–3 different partners. They take turns being the speaker and the listener. As the speaker, students share their initial ideas and read their first draft. As the listener, students ask questions and give feedback that will help their partner clarify and strengthen their ideas and writing.
If time allows, display these prompts for feedback:
“ makes sense, but what do you mean when you say. . . ?”
“Can you describe that another way?”
Close the partner conversations and give students 3–5 minutes to revise their first draft. Encourage students to incorporate any good ideas and words they got from their partners to make their next draft stronger and clearer. If time allows, invite students to compare their first and final drafts. Select 2–3 students to share how their drafts changed and why they made the changes they did.
After Stronger and Clearer Each Time, invite the different groups to share their solutions. Ask them to:
The takeaway should include:
Imagine the school will be holding a 5K fundraising walk on the school grounds. Your class is supposed to design the course for the walk.
What will you need to do to design the course for the walk?
Come up with a method to measure the course.