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The purpose of this Warm-up is to elicit the idea that different weights on each side of a hanger cause the hanger to be balanced or unbalanced, which will be useful when students use hanger diagrams to develop general strategies for solving equations in a later activity. While students may notice and wonder many things about this image, the possible weights on each hanger and the fact that one hanger is balanced and the other is not are the important discussion points.
Tell students to close their books or devices (or to keep them closed). Display this 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. Record and display their responses without editing or commentary for all to see. If possible, record the relevant reasoning on or near the image.
If needed, explain that the photo shows two clothes hangers with a sock hung from each end of each hanger. The socks have different objects inside them that have different weights. If the contrast of “balanced” and “unbalanced” hangers does not come up during the conversation, ask students to discuss this idea. If possible, use a real clothes hanger to demonstrate.
Give students 3 minutes of quiet work time followed by a whole-class discussion.
In the two diagrams, all the triangles weigh the same and all the squares weigh the same.
For each diagram, come up with . . .
The purpose of this discussion is to understand how the hanger diagrams work. Some possible questions for discussion:
In this activity, students match hanger diagrams to equations. Then students use the diagrams and equations to find the unknown value in each diagram. This value is a solution of the equation.
Display the diagrams and explain that each square labeled with a 1 weighs 1 unit, and each shape labeled with a variable has an unknown weight. Shapes labeled with the same variable have the same weight.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give 5–10 minutes of quiet work time and time to share their responses with a partner, followed by a whole-class discussion.
On each balanced hanger, shapes with the same variable have the same weight.
Much discussion takes place between partners. Invite students to share how they found a solution to each equation.
Display one of the hanger diagrams alongside its matching equation. Demonstrate removing the same number from each side (cross off shapes), and then dividing each side by the same thing (circle equal groups of shapes). Show how these moves correspond to doing the same thing to each side of the equation. (See the student Lesson Summary for an example of this.)
Help students make connections between the representations by asking questions, such as “Where do you see division in both the hanger diagram and the equation?”
Students are presented with balanced hangers and are asked to write equations that represent them. They are then asked to explain how to use the diagrams, and then the equations, to reason about a solution. Students notice the structure of equations and diagrams and find correspondences between them and between solution strategies (MP7).
Draw students’ attention to the diagrams in the Task Statement. Ensure they notice that the hangers are balanced and that each hanging piece is labeled with its weight. Some weights are labeled with numbers, but some are unknown, so they are labeled with a variable.
Keep students in the same groups. Give 5–10 minutes of quiet work time and time to share their responses with a partner, followed by a whole-class discussion.
Here are some balanced hangers diagrams where each piece is labeled with its weight in the same units. For each diagram:
The purpose of this discussion is to ensure that students:
Invite students to demonstrate, side by side, how they reasoned with each diagram and its matching equation. For example, Diagram A can be shown next to the equation . Cross out a piece representing 1 from each side, and write , followed by . Encircle 3 equal groups on each side, and write , followed by . Repeat for as many diagrams as time allows. If Diagrams A and B did not present much of a challenge for students, spend most of the time on Diagrams C and D.
Display the equation for all to see. Ask students to work with their partner to draw a corresponding hanger diagram. Then one partner solves by reasoning about the equation, the other solves by reasoning about the diagram. Ask students to compare the two strategies and discuss how they are alike and how they are different.
In this lesson, we worked with two ways to show that two amounts are equal: a balanced hanger and an equation. We can use think about the weights on a balanced hanger to understand steps we can use to find an unknown amount in a matching equation.
This hanger diagram shows a total weight of 7 units on one side that is balanced with 3 equal, unknown weights and a 1-unit weight on the other. An equation that represents the relationship is .
We can remove a weight of 1 unit from each side and the hanger will stay balanced. This is the same as subtracting 1 from each side of the equation.
An equation for the new balanced hanger is .
We can make 3 equal groups on each side and the hanger will stay balanced. This is the same as dividing each side of the equation by 3 (or multiplying each side by ). In other words, the hanger will balance with of the weight on each side.
The two sides of the hanger balance with two 1-unit weights on one side and 1 weight of unknown size on the other side. So, the unknown weight is 2 units.
Here is a concise way to write the steps above: