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The purpose of this How Many Do You See is for students to subitize or use grouping strategies to describe the images they see. The images include 10-frames to elicit students' work when adding within 20. The images also encourage students to think about composing a ten by counting on. This is the focus of the activities later in the lesson.
How many do you see?
How do you see them?
The purpose of this activity is for students to add a one-digit number and a two-digit number in a way that makes sense to them.
Monitor for and select students with the following approaches to share in the Activity Synthesis:
The approaches are sequenced from more concrete to more abstract to help students make sense of different approaches when it is possible to compose a new ten. Aim to elicit both key mathematical ideas and a variety of student voices, especially students who haven't shared recently
During the Activity Synthesis, the teacher represents student approaches with connecting cubes, so the new ten is visible to all students.
Add 'Em Up Partner Cards
The purpose of this activity is for students to practice adding a one-digit number and a two-digit number in a way that makes sense to them. Students may choose to use methods shared in the previous activity. Give half of the class one-digit numbers and the other half two-digit numbers. Students work in pairs to create a sum with a two-digit number and a one-digit number. In some problems, the sum will require composing a ten when adding ones to ones. Monitor for students who share ways they make a new ten with connecting cubes or drawings to share in the Activity Synthesis.
When students choose a method to add based on the pair of numbers they are adding, they make use of structure and apply regularity in reasoning (MP7, MP8). This could mean counting on when the one-digit number is small, adding the ones when there is no new ten, and adding on to make a ten if needed.
Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.
Practice Round:
Equation: __________________________________
Round 1
Equation: __________________________________
Round 2
Equation: __________________________________
Round 3
Equation: __________________________________
Round 4
Equation: __________________________________
Round 5
Equation: __________________________________
Optional
The purpose of this activity is for students to solve story problems that require adding a two-digit number and a one-digit number with composing a ten. This activity offers additional practice using methods discussed in the previous activities, while giving context for adding these quantities. Students share examples of when they have added or seen others add quantities like those they have been adding. This activity is optional because it provides practice solving story problems with numbers larger than 20, which is not an expectation of students in grade 1.
Display and
“What do you notice about these equations?” (Both equations start with 45. One equation shows the sum is 48, and the other shows the sum is 53. The first equation shows 4 tens and some ones on both sides. The other equation shows 4 tens and some ones on one side and 5 tens and some ones on the other side.)
“Sometimes when adding two-digit and one-digit numbers the sum has the same number of tens as the two-digit number you start with, like 48 has the same number of tens as 45 in this equation. Sometimes the sum has more tens than the two-digit number, like 53 has more tens than 45 in this equation. Why do you think that happens?” (Sometimes when you count on, you count to the next ten. When you have more than ten ones, you make a new ten, so the value shows more tens.)
Find the value of .
Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.