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The purpose of this Warm-up is to allow students to connect language to mathematical representation, which will be useful when students make sense of, represent, and solve story problems in a later activity. Although the Compare, Difference Unknown stories that students will solve in later lessons do not involve actions, the “are there enough?” context of this problem elicits matching strategies that will be helpful as students make sense of ways to represent and discuss the difference.
This Warm-up gives students opportunities to make sense of problems (MP1).
Mai passes out crayons for an art project.
There are 8 students waiting for crayons.
Mai has 7 packs of crayons.
How can you act out this story?
The purpose of this activity is for students to represent “are there enough?” story problems in a way that makes sense to them and to describe the relationships between the quantities in the problem. The contexts in this activity are intentionally designed to elicit matching strategies from students. Look for the ways students show that there are or are not enough. Listen for and highlight the ways students represent and describe how they see the bigger quantity, the smaller quantity, and the difference using informal language. In the Synthesis, students have opportunities to describe the relationship between the bigger and smaller quantity using both “1 more” and “1 fewer.”
There are 9 markers in a bin.
There are 4 caps for the markers.
Are there enough caps for the markers?
Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.
There are 9 students at the table.
There are 8 pencils.
Are there enough pencils for every student?
Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.
There are 6 students.
There are 8 chairs.
Are there enough chairs for every student?
Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.
The purpose of this activity is for students to practice using the words “more” and “fewer” to compare the quantities of objects. Students are familiar with describing numbers and quantities of objects using “1 more,” “1 less”, or “1 fewer” from kindergarten. This lesson intentionally encourages the use of “fewer” to prepare students to make sense of Compare, Difference Unknown story problems that ask, “How many fewer?” in upcoming lessons.
This activity helps revisit kindergarten concepts and build a common experience for all students to understand that “how many more?” and “how many fewer?” questions are both asking about the difference between a bigger quantity and a smaller quantity.
“Today we answered 'are there enough?' questions. We shared different ways we could see whether there were 1 more or 1 fewer.”
Display the story from the Warm-up and the list of ways students shared they could represent the story.
“Pick one of the ways we shared to represent the story. How could you describe this story using '1 more' or '1 fewer'?”