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The purpose of this Number Talk is to activate students’ previous experiences with addition methods involving composing a ten. In previous lessons, students used their knowledge of making a ten to find sums within 20 and used methods based on place value to compose a ten when adding within 100. This Number Talk is designed to encourage these methods.
Find the value of each expression mentally.
The Plant Project Handout
The purpose of this activity is for students to create a line plot from data presented in a table. The table includes data with longer lengths and a greater difference between the shortest and longest lengths than the data used in previous lessons. Students make decisions about how to label the number line using what they have learned about the structure of line plots and how to represent and label measurement data. The Synthesis discussion focuses on sharing and comparing the strategies students used to create their line plots, focusing on how they chose which numbers to use on their line plots (MP3).
Use the data in this table. Create a line plot.
| Group B | plant heights (centimeters) |
|---|---|
| Andre | 33 |
| Clare | 25 |
| Diego | 27 |
| Elena | 25 |
| Han | 35 |
| Jada | 33 |
| Kiran | 26 |
| Noah | 30 |
| Priya | 26 |
| Tyler | 33 |
The purpose of this activity is to interpret measurement data represented by line plots. Students use the line plots they created in the previous activity and another line plot about plant heights to answer questions. In the Activity Synthesis, students share how they found the difference between two lengths using the line plot and discuss how the structure of the line plot helps to show differences (MP7).
The Plant Project
Answer the questions using your line plot.
“Today, you created line plots to represent measurement data about plant heights, answered questions about the data, and shared statements based on what you learned from the line plots.”
Display Han’s line plot:
Invite previously selected students to share their statements based on Han's line plot.
If time permits, share additional responses.
This line plot shows data about hand spans of teachers. The line with numbers shows inches, like a ruler. Each X represents the hand span of 1 teacher.
We know that 5 teachers have a hand span of 8 inches because there are 5 Xs above the 8.