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Decide if each statement is true or false. Be prepared to explain your reasoning.
The purpose of this activity is for students to interpret and solve two-step problems involving length. Students represent and solve the problem in a way that makes sense to them.
Monitor for and select students with the following approaches to share in the Synthesis:
The approaches are sequenced from more concrete to more abstract ways to represent the quantities and actions in the story problem to help students make connections between different ways to make sense of and solve a two-step problem. Some students may use a combination of different representations (for example, a tape diagram to make sense of the story and base-ten diagrams to help with the calculations). Aim to elicit both key mathematical ideas and a variety of student voices, especially students who haven't shared recently.
Lin finds a piece of ribbon that is 92 cm long. She cuts a piece for Noah that is 35 cm.
Then Lin cuts off 28 cm of her ribbon. She gives it to Jada. How much ribbon does Lin have left?
The purpose of this activity is for students to represent and solve two-step story problems. Students begin the activity by looking at the first problem displayed, rather than in their books. At the end of the Launch, students open their books and work on the problems. In the Synthesis, students compare different ways they represent and solve the problems.
This activity uses MLR6 Three Reads. Advances: reading, listening, representing.
MLR6 Three Reads
Solve. Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words. Write the units.
“Today, you solved different kinds of story problems that had two parts.”
“How did you represent your thinking and keep track of your calculations? How did you keep up with the lengths you knew and what you needed to find out?” (I used diagrams to make sense of the story. I drew base-ten diagrams to help me solve the problem. I put a circle around my answer so I could use it for the next problem.)
“What ideas for solving story problems have you learned from others?”