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This Warm-up prompts students to carefully analyze and compare features of comparison statements. In making comparisons, students have a reason to use language precisely (MP6). The activity enables the teacher to hear the terminologies students know and how they talk about characteristics of these statements. During the Activity Synthesis, students discuss the changes that can be made to the incorrect statement to make it a true statement.
¿Cuáles 3 van juntas?
Compare and Order Quantities Cards, Spanish
The purpose of this activity is for students to compare numbers represented in different ways. Students place the numbers in order from least to greatest. Students may create alternate representations for each number in order to compare them. For example, students may represent each number with a drawing, or write the two-digit number that matches each card (MP2).
Escoge un grupo de tarjetas.
Ordena las tarjetas de menor a mayor.
Prepárate para explicar cómo ordenaste tus tarjetas.
Escribe los números en orden, de menor a mayor.
Grupo A:
Grupo B:
Grupo C:
Grupo D:
Si te queda tiempo:
Mezcla 2 grupos de tarjetas.
Ordénalas de menor a mayor.
The purpose of this activity is for students to compare numbers less than 99 to the benchmark numbers 5, 10, 50, and 99.
Students may use a variety of methods. Students may consider the relative magnitude of numbers (49 is one away from 50), use the value of the tens and ones (22 goes after 10 because 2 tens is more than 1 ten), and count (I know 97, 98, 99) to put the numbers in order. The emphasis is on the order of the numbers rather than the exact placement since this is not a number line. During the Activity Synthesis, students share how they ordered the numbers.
Estos son algunos números en orden:
1
5
10
50
99
Asegúrate de que todos los números estén ordenados de menor a mayor.
En cada caso, escribe un número que haga que la afirmación de comparación sea verdadera.
“En esta sección, comparamos y ordenamos números de 2 dígitos. ¿Qué cosas nos pueden ayudar a ordenar números?” // “In this section, we compared and ordered two-digit numbers. What are some things that can help us order numbers?” (Compare the digits in the tens place first. If the numbers have the same amount of tens, compare the digits in the ones place. Think about numbers they are close to. Think about the counting sequence.)
Usamos el número de decenas y unidades para comparar números.
17 tiene 1 decena y 35 tiene 3 decenas, entonces 17 es menor que 35.
17 es menor que 35.
35 es mayor que 17.
35 es igual a 35.