The purpose of this activity is for students to compare two methods to record a newly composed ten or hundred when using the same algorithm. The first method, which students saw in a previous lesson, records the newly composed ten or hundred as ““10” or “100,” respectively, at the top of the problem. The second method records the newly composed ten or hundred as a single digit of 1 at the top of the tens or hundreds column, respectively. It is important that students understand an additional 1 in the tens column represents a newly composed ten, and an additional 1 in the hundreds column represents a newly composed hundred. Students interpret the work and thinking shown in the different methods, and discuss the similarities and differences (MP3).
MLR8 Discussion Supports. Synthesis: Revoice student ideas to demonstrate and amplify mathematical language use. For example, revoice the student statement “Because when you add 7 and 6, that’s 13, so you have 1 more,” as “Because when you add 7 and 6, that’s 13, so now we have 3 ones and 1 ten.”
Advances: Speaking