Sign in to view assessments and invite other educators
Sign in using your existing Kendall Hunt account. If you don’t have one, create an educator account.
Draw arrows on a number line to represent these situations:
The temperature was -5 degrees. Then the temperature rose 5 degrees.
A climber was 30 feet above sea level. Then she descended 30 feet.
What’s the opposite?
The goal of this discussion is for students to come up with many different concrete examples of opposites. Begin by inviting a few students to share their responses. Then ask students to describe additional pairs of situations and numbers that are opposites. For example, students might say that 5 hours later is the opposite of 5 hours earlier or that turning 90 degrees clockwise is the opposite of turning 90 degrees counterclockwise.
If some students struggle with working backwards to fill in the change when given the final elevation, consider asking:
Your teacher will give you a long strip of paper.
Complete each statement using <, >, or =. Use your number line to explain your reasoning.
Some students might forget which symbol means greater than or less than.
Some students may be confused between comparing the value of the expression and the magnitude of the expression. Explain that the number to the left on a number line has the lesser value, even if it may have the greater magnitude (farther away from zero).