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The purpose of this activity is for students to make sense of a visual representation of the hours in 1 day. This representation is designed to help students see the hours that make up a.m. and p.m. Students might mention that the representation looks like a number line, because it is linear. Consider pointing out ways the 2 representations are alike and ways they are different. For example, students may notice that the same 12 hours are repeated in each part of the day, but numbers do not repeat on a number line. Students have opportunities to develop logical arguments for why an event may happen during a.m. or p.m. hours and critique the arguments of others (MP3).
This activity uses MLR8 Discussion Supports. Advances: listening, conversing.
MLR8 Discussion Supports
Create your own representation for the hours in a day.
Circle and label the time you eat breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
Shade the time you might be sleeping.
Show the time of day for each activity. Fill in the blank with a.m. or p.m. Explain your reasoning to your partner.
The purpose of this activity is for students to practice telling and writing time from an analog clock, using “a.m.” and “p.m.” Students are not expected to draw the hands on the clock precisely, but it is important that they think about the relative position of the hour hand in terms of the hour and the minutes that have passed. When students explain whether the time is a.m. or p.m. and how they draw the hour hand on the analog clock, they attend to precision (MP6).
activity
do homework ____________
get ready for bed ____________
eat lunch ____________
on the way to school ____________
in bed sleeping ____________
time
“Today we learned that the hours in a day are split into 2 groups called ‘a.m.’ and ‘p.m.’ We learned that ‘a.m.’ is usually thought of as morning and ‘p.m.’ is thought of as afternoon and night.”
Display:
“Tell your partner what time you might do each of these activities. Include ‘a.m.’ or ‘p.m.’ with the time.”
We learned to read clocks to tell and write the time to the nearest 5 minutes. We told the time in hours and minutes by starting at 1 and counting on by 5. We used “half past,” “quarter past,” or “quarter till” to tell time, using the minute hand. We used “a.m.” and “p.m.” to tell and show the time of day.