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The purpose of this Warm-up is to elicit the idea that two true comparison statements can be used to describe the relationship between two values, which will be useful when students write statements using , , and in a later activity.
What do you notice?
What do you wonder?
Greatest of Them All Stage 1 Recording Sheet
The purpose of this activity is for students to learn Stage 1 of a new center called Greatest of Them All. Students use digit cards to create the greatest possible two-digit number. Each student draws a card and writes that number as a digit on the recording sheet. Each student does this twice, to make a two-digit number. Once a digit is placed, it can’t be moved. Students compare their numbers using , , or . The player with the greater two-digit number wins the round. Students think strategically about place value when they decide how to use the first of the two cards they draw (MP7).
Students should remove cards that show 10 from their deck.
The purpose of this activity is for students to write the symbol or number that makes a comparison statement true. Students read the comparison statement. This activity has two parts. In the first part, students are given two numbers with a blank space. Students write a comparison symbol that makes the statement true. Then students read the comparison statement. Reading the statement encourages students to relate the language of comparison to the symbols (MP6). In the second part of the activity, students create true comparison statements when given a comparison symbol and one number or when only given the comparison symbol. Students determine a number or numbers that will make the comparison true.
Compare the numbers.
Write <, >, or = in each blank.
Then read the comparison statement.
Display .
“Today we used symbols to make comparison statements true. We also filled in numbers to make true statements. What is the greatest number that would make this statement true? What other numbers would make it true?” (34 is the greatest number that would make this true. We could put any number from 0–34 in the box to make the statement true.)