Not all roles available for this page.
Sign in to view assessments and invite other educators
Sign in using your existing Kendall Hunt account. If you don’t have one, create an educator account.
Find the value of each expression mentally.
The purpose of this activity is for students to use the relationship between addition and subtraction to make sense of different counting methods for subtracting three-digit numbers. Students analyze two different methods for a given problem, in which a number is subtracted from a multiple of 100. They consider how thinking about a subtraction expression as an unknown addend equation can be helpful, and they discuss how counting on can be a useful method for subtraction. The number line can support this method, so they have the opportunity to make connections between counting on a number line and adding on or subtracting by place, using equations.
Mai and Lin find the value of .
Mai’s work
Lin’s work
Find the value of each expression.
Show your thinking, using drawings, numbers, or words.
Try Mai’s way. Find the value of .
The purpose of this activity is for students to use their understanding of expanded form, place value, and properties of operations to reason about adding and subtracting by place (MP7). Students analyze different methods and representations that show adding hundreds to hundreds, tens to tens, and ones to ones. Students notice that hundreds, tens, and ones can be added in any order. In the next section, the focus will be on strategies based on place value, and will include composing and decomposing tens and hundreds. In the Activity Synthesis, there are discussions that honor all methods, while connecting each strategy to place value, in preparation for the work of the upcoming lessons.
Andre and Diego show their thinking with equations. They find the value of .
Andre’s work
Diego’s work
How are Andre’s and Diego’s work alike? How are they different?
Show your thinking, using drawings, numbers, or words.
Try Andre’s way. Find the value of .
Try Diego’s way. Find the value of .
Choose your own way to find the value of . Show your thinking, using drawings, numbers, or words.
Choose your own way to find the value of . Show your thinking, using drawings, numbers, or words.
“Today you shared different ways to represent adding and subtracting numbers. You also talked about how thinking about place value and expanded form can help you find the value of an expression.”
“What was most helpful to you when finding the difference?”
“What is something that you learned from comparing with a partner about adding or subtracting three-digit numbers by place value?”
We compared 3-digit numbers. We used addition to find the difference. We added and subtracted by counting on or counting back. We wrote numbers in expanded form to add or subtract, using place value.