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The purpose of this Choral Count is for students to practice counting by 10 and by 100 and to notice patterns in the count. These understandings help students develop fluency, see that multiples of 100 are also multiples of 10, and prepare them to round large numbers to the nearest ten and the nearest hundred.
The purpose of this activity is for students to round given numbers to the nearest ten and the nearest hundred to see that the result can be the same for some numbers. Students think about what it means to round a number that is exactly halfway between two tens or two hundreds, and are introduced in the Activity Synthesis to the convention that these numbers are rounded up (MP3).
Round each number to the nearest ten and the nearest hundred. Use number lines if you find them helpful.
| number | nearest ten | nearest hundred |
|---|---|---|
| 18 | ||
| 97 | ||
| 312 | ||
| 439 | ||
| 601 |
Kiran and Priya are rounding some numbers, but they are stuck trying to round 415 and 750.
Do you agree with Kiran and Priya? Explain your reasoning.
The purpose of this activity is for students to practice rounding to the nearest ten and the nearest hundred in context. Students work with numbers from a previous lesson to estimate the total number of students in a school. They learn that how a number is rounded (to the nearest ten or to the nearest hundred) can give different estimates for the same situation.
The table shows the numbers of people in different parts of a school at noon during a school day.
Andre and Lin are trying to estimate the number of people in the whole school. Andre plans to round the numbers to the nearest hundred. Lin plans to round them to the nearest ten.
| location | number | Andre's estimate (nearest hundred) |
Lin's estimate (nearest ten) |
|---|---|---|---|
| playground | 94 | ||
| cafeteria | 163 | ||
| art room | 36 | ||
| library | 49 | ||
| classrooms | 216 | ||
| gymnasium | 109 | ||
| music room | 52 | ||
| total |
“Today we rounded numbers to the nearest ten and the nearest hundred.”
“What important ideas about rounding did we learn today?” (Rounding to the nearest ten and the nearest hundred sometimes gives the same number. When a number is right in between two multiples of 10, or two multiples of 100, we round up. We can round to estimate. How we round can change our estimate.)