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Keep students in the same groups from the previous lesson. Remind students of the path they should measure. Instruct them to come back to the classroom to finish their calculations as soon as they have recorded their measurements.
If several groups are sharing a trundle wheel, they each measure the given path once and compare their data with each other.
Give students 10–20 minutes to take turns measuring and 10 minutes of group work time to finish their calculations, followed by whole-class discussion.
Use Collect and Display to direct attention to words collected and displayed from an earlier lesson. Invite students to borrow language from the display as needed, and update it throughout the lesson.
Earlier you made trundle wheels to measure long distances. Your teacher will show you a path to measure.
Measure the path with your trundle wheel three times and calculate the distance. Record your results in the table.
| trial number | number of clicks | computation | distance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | |||
| 2 | |||
| 3 |
Direct students’ attention to the reference created using Collect and Display. Ask students to share their process for measuring the path. Invite students to borrow language from the display as needed, and update the reference to include additional phrases as they respond.
Ask each group to report their measurement for the length of the path and record their answers for all to see. Guide students to compare these answers by asking questions like these:
If time permits, consider asking, “If you could choose your own diameter for a trundle wheel, what would it be?” (A diameter that creates a circumference of 1 meter would be convenient, about 32 centimeters.)
Collect and store students’ trundle wheels so they will have access to them again in the next lesson.
If students lose track of the number of rotations along the path, consider asking: