Not all roles available for this page.
Sign in to view assessments and invite other educators
Sign in using your existing Kendall Hunt account. If you don’t have one, create an educator account.
The purpose of this Number Talk is to elicit strategies and understandings students have for adding within 100. These understandings help students develop fluency and will be helpful later in this lesson when students need to be able to add 2 two-digit numbers within 100 with composing a ten. When students describe methods based on making a ten, adding tens and tens and ones and ones, and using known or previously found sums, they are looking for and making use of the base-ten structure and properties of operations (MP7).
Find the value of each expression mentally.
The purpose of this activity is for students to find the sum of 2 two-digit numbers in a way that makes sense to them.
Monitor for and select students with the following approaches to share in the Activity Synthesis:
When sequencing student approaches, consider inviting students to share from the most common approach to the least common approach used during the activity. This will help students make sense of different approaches to find the sum of 2 two-digit numbers 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.
In the Activity Synthesis, student approaches are represented with drawings and numbers so the new ten is visible to all students.
The purpose of this activity is for students to add 2 two-digit numbers represented as towers of 10 and single connecting cubes. In this activity, each student grabs a handful of towers of 10 and a handful of single cubes. They add their handfuls to a partner's handfuls. When using connecting cubes in this way, students may recall activities from prior lessons where they counted collections, and organize their addends into like units (tens and ones), make new tens, and count the result. Students may also add on ones to make a new ten so that one student has only tens and the other has some tens and ones to add on. Other students may represent their thinking with equations to show making a ten or adding tens and tens and ones and ones.
During the Activity Synthesis, students discuss adding onto a two-digit number to compose a ten and adding tens and tens and ones and ones. The teacher records students' thinking using base-ten drawings and equations and encourages students to explain how each representation shows the method used to determine the sum. For example, when finding the sum of 45 and 37, if the students add tens and tens and ones and ones by counting all the ones without making a new tower of 10, the teacher represents their thinking as:
Students should have opportunities to connect and compare this method and representation with those that do show physically making a new ten with connecting cubes or drawing to group 10 ones to make a unit of ten. Students will interpret base-ten drawings in the next lesson.
Round 1:
Grab a handful of towers of ten and a handful of single cubes.
I have ______________ cubes. My partner has ______________ cubes.
How many cubes do you and your partner have altogether?
Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.
Round 2:
I have ______________ cubes. My partner has ______________ cubes.
How many cubes do you and your partner have altogether?
Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.
Round 3:
I have ______________ cubes. My partner has ______________ cubes.
How many cubes do you and your partner have altogether?
Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.
Round 4:
I have ______________ cubes. My partner has ______________ cubes.
How many cubes do you and your partner have altogether?
Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.
“Today we saw different ways we can add two-digit numbers. What new way did you try today, or are you excited to try tomorrow?”
Find the value of .
Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.