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The purpose of this Warm-up is to get students thinking about the relative values of numbers based on their location on the number line, which will be useful when students use inequality statements to compare values on the number line in a later activity. While students may notice and wonder many things about the image, the observations about which values are greater than or less than other values are the important discussion points.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Display the image for all to see. Ask students to think of at least one thing they notice and at least one thing they wonder. Give students 1 minute of quiet think time and then 1 minute to discuss with their partner the things they notice and wonder.
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
Ask students to share the things they noticed and wondered. Record and display their responses without editing or commentary. If possible, record the relevant reasoning on or near the image. Next, ask students, “Is there anything on this list that you are wondering about now?” Encourage students to observe what is on display and respectfully ask for clarification, point out contradicting information, or voice any disagreement.
Then, give students 1–2 minutes to work with a partner to determine a possible value for each letter based on its location. Invite groups to share the responses and reasoning. A possible set of values is A(-14), B(-5), C(-2), D(0), E(5), F(9).
In this activity, students are formally introduced to the phrase “solution to an inequality” as a number that can be used in place of the variable to make the inequality true. Students use given height restrictions for a variety of amusement park rides to explore these ideas. They represent the height restrictions as inequality statements and graph those inequalities on the number line. Students reason abstractly when determining whether a value is a solution to one or more of the inequalities and what that means in context (MP2).
Arrange students in groups of 2. Display the inequality for all to see. Ask students to determine a value for that will make the inequality true, and record student responses for all to see.
Tell students that just as a solution to an equation is a value of the variable that makes the equation true, a solution to an inequality is a value of the variable that makes the inequality true. And while equations generally have one solution, inequalities have many, sometimes infinitely many, solutions.
Give students 7–8 minutes of quiet work time followed by 1–2 minutes for a partner discussion. Follow with a whole-class discussion.
Priya finds these height requirements for some of the rides at an amusement park.
| To ride the . . . | you must be . . . |
|---|---|
| High Bounce | between 55 and 72 inches tall |
| Climb-A-Thon | under 60 inches tall |
| Twirl-O-Coaster | 58 inches minimum |
Write equations and/or inequalities for the height requirements of each ride. Use for the unknown height. Then, represent each height requirement on a number line.
High Bounce
Climb-A-Thon
Twirl-O-Coaster
Priya can ride the Climb-A-Thon, but she cannot ride the High Bounce or the Twirl-O-Coaster. Which of the following could be Priya’s height? Be prepared to explain your reasoning.
Jada is 56 inches tall. Which rides can she go on?
Kiran is 60 inches tall. Which rides can he go on?
The inequalities and represent the height restrictions, in inches, of another ride. Write three values that are solutions to both of these inequalities.
The purpose of this discussion is for students to communicate their understanding of what it means to be a solution to an inequality. Display the question for all to see, and give students 2–3 minutes to draft a response:
“What does it mean to be a solution to an inequality?”
Use Stronger and Clearer Each Time to give students an opportunity to revise and refine their response. 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:
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. Here is an example of a second draft:
“When a number is a solution to an inequality, that number could be used in place of the variable and the statement would be true.”
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.
Optional
What Number Am I Cards
This activity provides an additional opportunity for students to play a game to practice reasoning about whether given values make an inequality true. The goal of the game is for one student to guess a mystery number using as few inequalities as possible.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give each group 1 set of inequalities (statements and number lines) and 1 set of numbers. Review the game instructions with the class:
Your teacher will give you and your partner two sets of cards—one set shows inequalities represented as statements or number lines, and the other shows numbers. Place the inequality cards face up where everyone can see them. Shuffle the number cards, and stack them face down.
To play:
The purpose of this discussion is for students to share their most successful strategies for guessing the mystery number. Here are some possible questions for discussion:
The purpose of this discussion is for students to practice identifying numbers that are solutions to inequalities. Display the following inequalities for all to see:
Give students one value at a time, and ask them to determine which inequalities the number is a solution to.
If time allows, ask students to come up with values that are solutions to the following combinations of inequalities.
Let’s say a movie ticket costs less than \$15. If represents the cost of a movie ticket, we can use to express what we know about the cost of a ticket.
Any value of that makes the inequality true is called a solution to the inequality.
For example, 5 is a solution to the inequality because (or “5 is less than 15”) is a true statement, but 17 is not a solution because (“17 is less than 15”) is not a true statement.
If a situation involves more than one boundary, or limit, we will need more than one inequality to express it.
For example, if we knew that it rained for more than 10 minutes but less than 30 minutes, we could describe the number of minutes that it rained () with the following inequalities and number lines:
Any number of minutes greater than 10 is a solution to , and any number less than 30 is a solution to . But to meet the condition of “more than 10 but less than 30,” the solutions are limited to the numbers between 10 and 30 minutes, not including 10 and 30.
We can show the solutions visually by graphing the two inequalities on one number line.