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The purpose of an Estimation Exploration is to practice the skill of estimating a reasonable answer based on experience and known information. For this picture, it is hard to tell how many people there are, so a wide range of responses can be considered “about right.” Students will also use this image in the Cool-down, and there is an option for them to use the picture to generate ideas for story problems.
¿Cuántas personas hay en la imagen?
Escribe una estimación que sea:
| muy baja | razonable | muy alta |
|---|---|---|
The purpose of this activity is to write story problems for equations with an unknown value. In each given pair of addition or subtraction equations, one equation has the starting value unknown. Students may write Add To, Take From, Put Together/Take Apart, or Compare problems. When students contextualize the equations and make connections between the stories their peers share and the equations, they reason abstractly and quantitatively (MP2).
Tu profesor te va a asignar las ecuaciones A o las ecuaciones B. En cada caso, escribe un problema-historia que le corresponda a la ecuación.
Ecuaciones A
Ecuaciones B
The purpose of this activity is for students to write math stories. Several options are available for fueling their imagination. Examples:
Whichever source is used for ideas, students write a story problem that connects to mathematical ideas they have found. If students come up with a context, but are not able to count or estimate the quantities they see, display a set of numbers (such as 11, 25, 38, 56, 77, 93) that students can use to write their story problem.
When students write math stories based on images or things in their environment, and eventually answer those questions, they model with mathematics (MP4).
Escribe un problema-historia.
Usa números de 2 dígitos.
“De las historias que escucharon hoy, ¿cuál fue su favorita? ¿Por qué?” // “What is your favorite story that you heard today? Why?”
“Mañana van a hacer un póster para compartir su historia y una solución. Luego, van a ver todas las historias de sus compañeros” // “Tomorrow you will make a poster to share your story and a solution, and then you’ll look at all of your classmates’ stories.”