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Your teacher will time how long it takes a student to move from the start line to the finish line of a path.
First, invite a few students to share their predictions about the time it would take a faster mover to go from start to finish. Make sure that students see that it would take a shorter amount of time to move the same distance at a faster speed.
Then ask students to share why it might be important that the mover begins moving before the start line. Consider asking:
The key takeaway is that when an object moves at a constant speed, it doesn’t move faster or slower at any time. The initial 1-meter-long stretch, the warm-up zone, is there so the mover can accelerate to a constant speed before the timing begins.
Tell students that in the next activity they will do the experiment in small groups. When it is their turn to be the mover, they will need to move at a constant speed.
Students may have difficulty estimating the distance traveled in 1 second. Encourage them to mark the double number line to help. For example, marking 5 meters halfway between 0 and 10 and determining the elapsed time as half the recorded total may cue them to use division.
Instead of dividing 40 by 10, some students may instead calculate . Ask them to articulate what the resulting number means (0.25 second to travel 1 meter) and contrast that meaning with what the problem is asking (how many meters in one second). Another approach would be to encourage them to draw a double number line and think about how they can figure out what value for distance corresponds to 1 second on the line for elapsed time.