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The purpose of this True or False? is to elicit strategies students have for estimating. The reasoning students do here helps to deepen their understanding of how they may use what they know about place value and computation strategies, such as looking for friendly numbers, to decide whether or not an answer makes sense. It will also be helpful later when students determine whether an estimate is reasonable or not.
En cada caso, decide si la afirmación es verdadera o falsa. Prepárate para explicar tu razonamiento.
The purpose of this activity is for students to consider what it means for an answer to make sense. They see that they can use what they know about place value and strategies, such as finding friendly numbers, to estimate the answer to a problem and determine if an answer makes sense.
The quantities chosen are close to multiples of 10 to encourage students to consider strategies like front-end estimation (for example, in this task, adding or subtracting just the tens place). If students begin computing the exact numbers of seeds, remind them of the situation and language of the problem. For example, the first problem says that “Mai makes an estimate” and “about 80 seeds.” Also remind students that they do not need to solve to determine if the answer makes sense.
As students work, prompt them to explain their strategies for making estimates and relate those strategies to the ways students have reasoned about place value or methods they have used to add and subtract, such as looking for friendly numbers (MP3). When students use language, such as “about 80 seeds” to convey that they are estimating, they practice communicating with precision (MP6).
Hay 54 semillas de manzana en una bolsa. Después, se agregan 32 semillas más a la bolsa.
Mai estima que ahora hay aproximadamente 80 semillas. ¿Tiene sentido su estimación? Explica tu razonamiento.
Decide si cada una de estas estimaciones tiene sentido. Explícale tu razonamiento a tu compañero.
Hay 82 semillas de maíz en una bolsa. Kiran usa 28 para su proyecto de arte. ¿Cuántas semillas quedan en la bolsa?
If students continue to add or subtract to find the actual answer, consider asking:
The purpose of this activity is for students to determine if different estimates make sense and to make their own estimates for different problem types. In order to help students focus on reasoning about estimation, the activity uses simple Add To and Take From problem types. Students are asked to reason about an estimate and create their own estimates for a simple two-step problem. The actual answers to these problems are not shared, and it is not recommended that you have students find the actual answers to avoid students focusing on trying to find the “closest estimate” at this point. Help students focus on justifying and making reasonable estimates based on place value.
Para cada problema, decide si las estimaciones son muy altas, muy bajas o razonables. Para el último problema, crea tus propias estimaciones. Muestra cómo pensaste. Usa objetos, dibujos, números o palabras.
Tyler empieza un juego con 54 semillas. Lin captura 25 de las semillas de Tyler. ¿Cuántas semillas tiene Tyler ahora?
aproximadamente 60 semillas| muy baja | razonable | muy alta |
|---|---|---|
Jada recolecta 24 semillas de manzana y 42 semillas de naranja. Luego, recolecta 21 semillas de girasol. ¿Cuántas semillas tiene en total?
aproximadamente 80 semillas| muy baja | razonable | muy alta |
|---|---|---|
Diego empieza un juego con 25 semillas. Él captura 24 semillas. Luego, captura 27 más. ¿Cuántas semillas tiene Diego ahora?
Escribe una estimación que sea “muy baja”, una que sea “razonable” y una que sea “muy alta”.
| muy baja | razonable | muy alta |
|---|---|---|
“Hoy hablamos sobre lo que significa que las respuestas tengan sentido. ¿Cómo le describirían a un amigo lo que significa que una respuesta tiene sentido?” // “Today we talked about what it means for answers to make sense. How would you describe what it means for an answer to make sense to a friend?” (It’s close to the actual answer. It makes sense when I think about the numbers or what's happening in the situation. It’s possible.)
“¿De qué formas pueden saber que una respuesta no tiene sentido? Den un ejemplo si les ayuda.” // “What are some ways you would know that an answer does not make sense? Give an example if it is helpful.” (The size of the answer’s number doesn’t make sense with the numbers in the problem. The answer gets bigger when it should get smaller.)