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The purpose of this activity is for students to count a collection of between 90 and 120 objects. As students count, they apply what they have learned about grouping objects to make counting more efficient and accurate (MP6, MP7). Students may represent their count with different representations that they have worked with, including base-ten drawings, words ( _____ tens _____ ones), numbers, expressions, and equations.
How many objects are in your collection?
Represent how many in as many ways as you can.
The purpose of this activity is to count an organized arrangement of images and write a number to represent the quantity. The arrangement is designed to encourage kids to count by 10 as each row, except the last, has ten cats. Students may determine the number of tens and ones (10 tens and 8 ones is 108) or they may skip count the groups and count on by ones (10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108).
How many cats are there?
There are ____________ cats.
Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.
“Today we counted objects and images. How is counting a collection the same as counting images on paper? How is it different?” (They are the same because you can organize both into groups. They are different because you can’t move the images around into groups or piles however you want, but you can do that with real objects in a collection. With images, you can look for ways it may already be in groups or make your own by circling.)
“How did you use ten today to help you count? How was ten helpful?” (We organized our objects into groups of ten. Then we counted the tens. It helped us keep track when we had to count lots of things.)