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Tell students to close their books or devices (or to keep them closed). Arrange students in groups of 2. Remind students of the context of running on a treadmill, which they had encountered in an earlier unit. Use Co-Craft Questions to orient students to the context and to elicit possible mathematical questions.
Give students 1–2 minutes to write a list of mathematical questions that could be asked about the situation before comparing questions with a partner.
Some students did treadmill workouts.
Invite several partners to share one question with the class, and record responses. Ask the class to make comparisons among the shared questions and their own. Ask, “What do these questions have in common? How are they different?” Listen for and amplify language related to the learning goal, such as “constant speed,” “at the same rate,” and “ meters per hour (or minute).”
Tell students that they will now look more closely at Tyler's, Kiran's, and Mai’s workouts and compare them.
Students may look only at the number of cans in each offer or only at the price. For example, they may say that the deal offered by Store D is the best one because it is the only price that is under \$1. Ask students how many cans 80 cents buys at that store and whether the other prices shown are also for that many cans. Ask them how they might compare the prices for the same number of cans rather than for different numbers of cans.