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The purpose of this Warm-up is to elicit the idea that height can be measured, which will be useful when students interpret a number line showing the minimum heights required for amusement park rides in the next activity. While students may notice and wonder many things about this image, the important discussion points are the facts that heights can be measured, people are all different heights, and there are different reasons why people might need to know their height.
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
The purpose of this activity is for students to add and subtract within 100 and to use a number line as a representation. The height requirements for some amusement park rides are shown on a vertical number line. Students use what they know about the structure of the number line to identify rides people can go on based on their heights. Students also determine the heights of three people and show each height on the number line.
The number line shows how tall you must be to go on some rides at an amusement park.
What do you notice?
What do you wonder?
How many of the rides could a person go on if they are:
The purpose of this activity is for students to use the height measurements they labeled on the number line in the previous activity and some additional information to plan a family’s day at an amusement park. Students continue to interpret the measurement data and consider other constraints to make their plan. When students think about real-world implications and report on conclusions and reasoning, they model with mathematics (MP4).
Help Jada’s family plan their day at the amusement park. Use the following information.
“Today a number line helped us figure out which amusement park rides some people are tall enough to ride. How was this number line different from the other number lines we have used? Why do you think it was different?” (It was vertical. It helped to be vertical because we were talking about height. It was a better model of height because it goes up and down instead of sideways.)
Consider having students respond to the previous question as a journal prompt.