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.
The purpose of this Warm-up is for students to subitize or use grouping strategies to describe the images they see. When students decompose the images into groups of 10 to count efficiently, they are looking for and making use of structure (MP7). Students may need these images displayed for a longer amount of time in order to see the structure.
How many do you see? How do you see them?
The purpose of this activity is for students to use the Co-Craft Questions math language routine to make sense of a multiplication situation before solving. Students are first asked to generate questions they could ask about part of a problem. Then, students are given the full problem and asked to solve it. The activity concludes with students reflecting on the representations they used. In this activity, students will need to see the full problem to solve. Before the lesson, record the problem and have it hidden until the appropriate time in the lesson or write it for all to see at that point during the activity.
This activity uses MLR5 Co-Craft Questions. Advances: writing, reading, representing.
MLR5 Co-Craft Questions
Tyler has 3 boxes. He has 5 baseballs in each box. How many baseballs does he have altogether? Show your thinking using diagrams, symbols, or other representations.
The purpose of this activity is for students to use what they’ve learned about multiplication to solve and represent situations that involve equal groups. Students now have experience with multiple representations and have had the opportunity to choose which representation is most helpful to represent multiplication situations.
The Launch is an opportunity for students to share their experiences and ask questions about the objects to ensure each student has access to the context. If it is helpful, display images of the objects for students to reference.
Solve each problem. Show your thinking using diagrams, symbols, or other representations.
Display samples of student work with different representations (drawings of equal groups, tape diagrams, and expressions).
“Which representation did you find most helpful today and why?” (Drawings of equal groups helped me see what was happening in the problem. Diagrams helped me understand the problem, but I didn’t have to draw all the dots.)