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In this activity, students create equivalent expressions to given expressions. Students are encouraged to be creative in their answers, but should ensure that the new expressions are equivalent to the original. This work prepares students for writing equivalent equations in later activities.
Adjust the time for this activity to 10 minutes.
During the Activity Synthesis, display this equation for all to see: . Remind students that they were able to rewrite the expression on each side of this equation in many different ways. Consider using some of the students’ examples of equivalent expressions to list other equations that are equivalent to .
Ask students, “What other types of moves are possible when rewriting an equation in another form?” (Doing operations like adding, subtracting, multiplying, or dividing each side of the equation by the same value.)
Tell students that equivalent equations are equations that have the same solution. For example, and are equivalent equations because is the solution for both of them.
Ask students, “What is another way you could write an equation equivalent to using just one of these types of moves?” After a brief quiet think time, select a student, and record the student's response for all to see below the original equation. Draw and label arrows connecting the equations explaining how the equation changed. For example:
Ask students to think of another equation that is equivalent to the new equation. After a brief quiet think time, select a student to share their answer and description of the move. Record the response for all to see with arrows connecting the equations describing the move.
Arrange students in groups of 2.
Display for all to see: . Ask students what they notice. Move to the task when students notice that all the expressions are equivalent to 100.
For the task, encourage students to be creative, but check with their partner that their expressions are still equivalent to the original. Tell students to try to give examples that they think nobody else in the class has written.
Write as many equivalent expressions for each as you have time.
Invite 3–5 students to share examples that they have written for each expression. After each example, ask if other students can explain how it is equivalent to the original.
The purpose of this task is for students to understand and explain why they can add or subtract expressions from each side of an equation and still maintain the equality, even if the value of those expressions are not known. Both problems have shapes with unknown weight on each side to promote students' thinking about unknown values in this way before the transition to equations.
While the focus of this activity is on the relationship between both sides of the hanger and not equations, some students may start the second problem by writing and solving an equation to find the weight of a square. While students are working, identify those using equations and those not using equations. Ask them to answer the second problem during the whole-class discussion.
Display the first hanger image for all to see.
Tell students that this is a hanger problem similar to the one in the Warm-up, only instead of the weights hidden inside socks, each block type represents a different weight. For example, each green triangle weighs the same amount as any other green triangle, but weighs a different amount than does a blue square.
Ask students, “What will happen if you take 2 triangles off of the left side and 3 triangles off of the right side?” (The hanger will not balance. The left side will be lower.)
The purpose of this discussion is to examine moves that keep the hanger in balance and how those moves can help in solving for the weight of an unknown object.
Invite students to share their response and reasoning for the weight of a square. Ask if any groups used a different strategy to find the answer. If possible, record and display their work for all to see.
If it does not come up, ask students to consider how the hangers could be turned into equations.
To connect the hangers to equations, ask:
The goal of this activity is for students to transition their reasoning about solving hanger problems by maintaining the equality of each side, to solving equations using the same logic.
Students solve 2 more hanger problems and write equations to represent each hanger. In the first problem, the solution is not an integer, which will challenge any student who has been using guess-and-check in the previous activities and will encourage that student to look for a more efficient method.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give 5 minutes of quiet work time followed by partner discussion. Let students know that they should be prepared to share during the whole-class discussion, so they should make sure that their partner understands and agrees with the solution.
A triangle weighs 3 grams, and a circle weighs 6 grams.
The purpose of the discussion is to make connections between moves done to hangers that keep them balanced and moves done to equations to write equivalent equations. Prepare for all to see a display with 2 columns with hanger diagrams on the one side and equations on the other. Start the discussion with the original hanger diagram.
Ask students “What is an equation you wrote for the hanger?” (). Record the student response next to the original hanger in the right column .
Next, invite a student to suggest a move they could do to the circles that would keep the hanger balanced (remove 1 circle from each side). Add a new hanger diagram to the hanger column showing the suggested change. Then ask, “What is an equation we can write for this new hanger diagram?” () and record the new equation in the equation column.
Referring back to earlier work using arrows with rows of equivalent equations, in each column draw arrows on each side of the first hanger and equation to the second hanger and equation. Ask, “What should we write next to the arrows to describe what happened to the equations?” (remove 1 circle and subtract 6).
If time allows, add more rows to each column, each time inviting students to suggest moves that keep the hanger in balance and the equations equivalent.
Here are some questions for discussion:
The purpose of this discussion is to have students revisit the Warm-up and connect it to the activities, reflecting on why the hanger is an appropriate and helpful analogy for an equation.
Ask these questions:
If we have equal weights on the ends of a hanger, then the hanger will be in balance. If there is more weight on one side than on the other, the hanger will tilt to the heavier side.
We can think of a balanced hanger as a representation for an equation. An equation says that the expressions on each side have equal value, just like a balanced hanger has equal weights on each side. This hanger could be represented by .
If we have a balanced hanger and add or remove the same amount of weight from each side, the result will still be in balance. Here, we remove 2 triangles from each side, which is like subtracting from each side of the equation to get .
In the same way that adding or subtracting the same shapes on each side of a hanger keeps it in balance, adding or subtracting the same value to each side of an equation creates an equivalent equation.