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The purpose of this Number Talk is to elicit strategies and understandings students have for relating the operations of addition and subtraction. The equations , , and each show the same relationship between numbers. Students will use this idea during the lesson when they discuss why an addition or subtraction equation might match a given tape diagram.
Find the value of each expression mentally.
Card Sort Represent Story Problems Cards
The purpose of this activity is to match story problems with equations and tape diagrams. The numbers in this activity were selected so that there are 2 sets of story problems, tape diagrams, and equations that use the same numbers. This sorting task gives students opportunities to analyze story problems, tape diagrams, and equations closely in order to describe how the diagrams and equations represent the context of the story (MP2).
The goal of the Activity Synthesis is to discuss matching representations, highlighting how the tape diagram can help students understand the story and visually represent the equation.
The purpose of this activity is to write story problems that match given tape diagrams (MP2). One diagram represents a one-step Compare problem, while the other two show two-step problems. For the tape diagram with three addends, students might:
For the tape diagrams that represent Compare problems, students may phrase the question using “How many more . . . ?” or using “How many fewer . . . ?” Although these diagrams are typically used to represent Compare problems, students may also choose to write Put Together/Take Apart or Take Away problems.
The Lesson Synthesis highlights different types of story problems students write that match the same tape diagram.
Choose 1 of the diagrams. Write a story problem that the diagram could represent. Solve the problem.
Problem ______
“Today we connected story problems to diagrams and equations. We also used diagrams to create our own story problems.”
“What did you look for in the diagrams to help you match it to a story or an equation?”
“How did the diagram help you write a story problem?”