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Which 3 go together?
The purpose of this activity is for students to partition rectangles into halves, thirds, and fourths. Students fold paper shapes to guide their partitioning. Like the previous lesson with pattern blocks, students may determine that the pieces formed by the creases of their folds are equal by visual inspection. They also are encouraged to cut out the equal pieces to check whether they are close to being equal.
Most students likely will lay the pieces on top of each other to compare them. The expectation is that they may not be exact, but will be very close. Monitor as students fold the paper, and if students’ partitions are noticeably inaccurate, have them fold a new piece of paper before they cut.
Fold the rectangle to make 2 equal-size pieces. Cut them out.
Each piece is called a ____________________________.
Compare with your partner. Tell them how you know the pieces are equal.
Fold the rectangle to make 4 equal-size pieces. Cut them out.
Each piece is called a ____________________________.
Compare with your partner. Tell them how you know the pieces are equal.
Fold the rectangle to make 3 equal-size pieces. Cut them out.
Each piece is called a ____________________________.
Compare with your partner. Tell them how you know the pieces are equal.
The purpose of this activity is to determine whether or not circles are partitioned into halves, thirds, or fourths. Students explain why some circles are not examples of halves, thirds, and fourths, and demonstrate their understanding that it’s not just the number of pieces that help determine whether to use halves, thirds, or fourths, but whether they are equal pieces of the same whole (MP3, MP6).
Noah looks for examples of circles partitioned into halves, thirds, or fourths.
Put an X on the 2 circles in each row that are not examples.
halves
fourths
thirds
Partition this circle into thirds.
“Today you learned about making and identifying shapes that were decomposed, or partitioned, into halves, thirds, and fourths.”
“What is something you did to try to make the pieces equal when you decomposed shapes by cutting?” (I drew lines first. I folded carefully. I didn’t do a hard crease until I was sure.)
“What is something you did to try to make the pieces equal when you partitioned shapes by drawing lines?” (I made very light lines, and then traced them.)
If students fold the rectangles into parts other than thirds, consider asking: