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The purpose of this How Many Do You See? is to allow students to use subitizing or grouping strategies to describe the images they see.
¿Cuántos ves?
¿Cómo lo sabes?, ¿qué ves?
The purpose of this activity is for students to make sense of and solve Add To and Take From, Change Unknown story problems in a way that makes sense to them. Students represent the method they used and different methods are discussed during the Activity Synthesis. When students connect the quantities and action in each story problem to an equation and then solve the problem, they reason abstractly and quantitatively (MP2).
The teacher may want to incorporate movement into this activity by writing each problem on a piece of chart paper and placing each one in a different location around the classroom. Students can solve the problem at one location, discuss the problem with their partner, then move on to a new problem at a new location.
Resuelve todos los problemas.
Muestra cómo pensaste. Usa dibujos, números o palabras.
Algunas tortugas más se unieron al grupo.
Ahora hay 15 tortugas.
¿Cuántas tortugas se unieron?
Hay 17 pingüinos sentados en las rocas.
Algunos pingüinos saltan al agua.
Ahora hay 5 pingüinos sentados en las rocas.
¿Cuántos pingüinos saltaron al agua?
El entrenador trae un balde con 20 pescados.
Las focas comen algunos pescados.
Ahora quedan 3 pescados en el balde.
¿Cuántos pescados comen las focas?
En las piscinas de tacto, Tyler toca 6 mantarrayas.
Después, él toca algunas estrellas de mar.
Tyler toca 14 animales en total.
¿Cuántas estrellas de mar toca Tyler?
The purpose of this activity is for students to consider different ways to solve for the unknown in a Take From, Change Unknown problem. Students are presented with an equation that represents the order of the actions in the story. However, students often find that this equation is less intuitive to find the unknown value than an addition equation with an unknown addend. Students may also share the ways they use known sums and differences and how they make a 10 to find the unknown number.
In this activity, students show their understanding of the relationship between the quantities in the problem and their understanding of the relationship between addition and subtraction to share ways to solve the problem (MP2, MP7).
Clare observa 16 ranas mugidoras en el acuario.
Después, algunas de ellas se van nadando.
Ahora Clare puede ver solamente 9 ranas mugidoras.
¿Cuántas ranas mugidoras se fueron nadando?
Andre escribió , pero no sabe cómo encontrar el número desconocido.
Muéstrale a Andre cómo podría encontrar el número desconocido.
Muestra cómo pensaste. Usa dibujos, números o palabras.
Display one of the story problems from the lesson.
“Hoy resolvimos problemas-historia en los que sabíamos cuántos había al principio y al final, pero no sabíamos cuánto cambiaba la cantidad en la mitad de la historia. Examinamos métodos de suma y de resta que se pueden usar para darle sentido a estos problemas y resolverlos. Explíquenle a su pareja por qué se puede usar la suma o la resta para resolver estos problemas” // “Today we solved story problems where we knew how many of something there was at the beginning and at the end, but we didn't know how much it changed in the middle of the story. We looked at addition and subtraction methods that can be used to make sense of and solve these problems.
Explain to your partner why it works to use addition or subtraction to solve these problems.” (You can use addition to add on to one number until you get to the total. The number you added on is the unknown number. You can use subtraction to start with the total and take away the other number you know. The number you have left is the unknown number.)