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Arrange students in groups of 2. Display the image for all to see. Give students 1 minute of quiet think time and ask them to be prepared to share at least one thing they notice and one thing they wonder. Give students another minute to discuss their observations and questions.
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 appropriate parts of the diagrams. 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.
If the idea that pieces labeled with the same variable represent the same value does not come up during the conversation, ask students to discuss this idea.
As an extension, ask students to share possible values for the variables in each diagram. Record and display their responses for all to see. If possible, record the values on the displayed diagram.
Students may not realize that when a variable is assigned to represent a quantity in a situation, it has the same value each time it appears. Revisit what and represent in these problems and why each occurrence of a variable in a representation must represent the same value.
In the second situation, students might argue that a more accurate representation would be 5 boxes with to show the first distribution of stickers, and then five boxes with 2 to show the second distribution. Tell students that such a representation would indeed correctly describe the actions in the situation, but that the work of the task is to understand this diagram to set us up for success later.