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The purpose of an Estimation Exploration is to practice the skill of estimating a reasonable answer based on experience and known information. If needed, discuss what a food drive is in the Launch of the activity.
How many cans did the first graders collect for the food drive?
Record an estimate that is:
| too low | about right | too high | 
|---|---|---|
The purpose of this activity is for students to find pairs of numbers that have a value that is between 35–65. Some students may use trial and error to solve the problem. Encourage students to consider a strategic way to determine if a combination of two classes may or may not meet the constraint. For example, students may notice that combining 1st and 2nd grade will not work because 5 tens and 2 tens is 7 tens which is more than the 65 can limit.
| Room | Cans Collected on Day 1 | 
|---|---|
| Kindergarten | 18 | 
| 1st grade | 51 | 
| 2nd grade | 23 | 
| 3rd grade | 13 | 
| 4th grade | 39 | 
| 5th grade | 40 | 
| 6th grade | 8 | 
| 7th grade | 29 | 
| 8th grade | 30 | 
If the cans from each grade need to stay together in a box, how can the boxes be packed so there are 35 to 65 cans in each box?
Show your thinking using drawings and equations.
If you have time: Can any box have cans from 3 grade levels?
What is the least amount of boxes the school can pack to send to the Food Bank?
“Today we represented and solved real world problems about packing cans in boxes to take to the Food Bank.”
"We had to use some assumptions in our work today. An assumption is when we think something is true, even though we don't really know. What assumptions did you make when deciding which way of packing the boxes was best?" (I assumed it would be better to have fewer boxes. I assumed it would be better to have lighter boxes. I assumed all the boxes should weigh the same amount if possible.)