The purpose of this activity is for students to find the area of a figure composed of rectangles, given only the side lengths of the rectangles. The context of paving a patio provides students a link to their experience with squares of various sizes and should help them imagine how the diagram of the patio could be covered with squares. Students decompose the patio into rectangles and can multiply to find the area of the patio, but they should make the connection that the number of pavers needed to cover the patio is the same as the area of the patio. When students connect the quantities in the story problem to an equation, they reason abstractly and quantitatively (MP2).
MLR7 Compare and Connect. Synthesis: Invite groups to prepare a display that shows the strategy they used to determine the number of tiles and the area of the floor. Encourage students to include details that will help others interpret their thinking. Give students time to investigate each others’ work. During the whole-class discussion, ask students, “¿Por qué resultó la misma área con todos los métodos?” // “How did the same area show up in each method?” “¿Por qué las diferentes estrategias llevaron al mismo resultado?” // “Why did the different approaches lead to the same outcome?” “¿Alguien resolvió el problema de la misma forma, pero lo explicaría de otra manera?” // “Did anyone solve the problem the same way, but would explain it differently?”
Advances: Representing, Conversing