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The purpose of this Warm-up is to draw students' attention to different ways of covering a plane figure with squares and reinforce the idea that tiling involves covering a region without gaps or overlaps. It gives students a reason to use language precisely (MP6). It gives the teacher an opportunity to hear how students use terminology to talk about characteristics of the items in comparison to one another. During the discussion, ask students to explain the meaning of any terms they use, such as "rows," "columns," "area," "gaps," "overlap," and "tiling."
¿Cuáles 3 van juntos?
The purpose of this activity is for students to use square tiles to find the areas of rectangles. They use their knowledge of tiling to complete the tiling that is started in each rectangle. Students may use physical tiles on copies of the blackline master or reason directly on the images in the student book, which may not be the right size for physical tiles. The Activity Synthesis focuses on solidifying the idea that area is the number of square units that cover a flat figure, with no gaps or overlaps.
This activity uses MLR1 Stronger and Clearer Each Time. Advances: reading, writing.
Tu profesor te dará fichas cuadradas y una hoja que muestra rectángulos y cuadrados.
Describe o muestra cómo usar las fichas cuadradas para medir el área de cada rectángulo. Puedes poner fichas cuadradas sobre las partes de la hoja donde aparecen los cuadrados. Si es necesario, también puedes mover las fichas.
MLR1 Stronger and Clearer Each Time
The purpose of this activity is for students to recognize that different shapes can have the same area. Students sort the cards, first in any way that makes sense to them and then by area. After the cards are sorted by area, students create another rectangle that fits into one of the categories (by having a particular area). This sorting task gives students opportunities to analyze the structure of the rectangles closely and make connections (MP7).
Students may start to notice that the organization of the squares that cover a rectangle makes them efficient to count. The squares can be grouped by row or by column, or in other ways. As students sort and create rectangles with certain areas, monitor for those who leverage the structure of a rectangle to find the area. Invite them to share in the Activity Synthesis.
In this activity, the squares on the gridded rectangles are not the same size as the square tiles, but students could still use tiles as a support. Provide students access to square tiles if they would like to use them, but encourage them to draw what they create on the grid provided.
“Hoy aprendimos que el área es el número de unidades cuadradas que cubren una figura plana sin espacios ni sobreposiciones. Usamos fichas cuadradas para encontrar el área de rectángulos. También aprendimos que podemos dibujar cuadrados del mismo tamaño en rectángulos para representar un recubrimiento. Podemos contar los cuadrados para encontrar el área de un rectángulo de la misma forma en la que contaríamos las fichas” // “Today we learned that area is the number of square units that cover a flat figure with no gaps or overlaps. We used square tiles to find the areas of rectangles. We also learned we can draw equal-size squares in rectangles to represent tiling. We can count the squares to find the area of a rectangle just like we would count tiles.”
“¿Qué características de los rectángulos nos ayudan a encontrar su área?” // “What features do rectangles have that help us find their area?” (The rows and the columns in a rectangle show equal groups of squares, so we can just count one row or one column and then skip-count to find the area.)
¿Qué observas? ¿Qué te preguntas?
Dibuja en la cuadrícula un rectángulo que tenga un área de 8 unidades cuadradas.
Tu profesor te va a dar varias tarjetas que muestran rectángulos.
Clasifica las tarjetas en las categorías que quieras. Prepárate para explicar el significado de tus categorías.
Para cada categoría, dibuja rectángulos que estén en esa categoría.