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 to invite students to share what they know about the number and elicit ways in which it can be represented. It gives the teacher the opportunity to hear students’ understandings about and experiences with fractions, in particular. The fraction is familiar to students and will be central in the next activity.
This is the first time students experience the What Do You Know About _____ routine in grade 4. Students should be familiar with this routine from a previous IM grade. However, they may benefit from a brief review of the steps involved.
The purpose of this activity is for students to use fraction strips to represent halves, fourths, and eighths. The denominators in this activity are familiar from grade 3. The goal is to remind students of the relationships between fractional parts in which one denominator is a multiple of another. Students should notice that each time the unit fractions on a strip are folded in half, there are twice as many equal-size parts on the strip and that each part is half as large.
In the discussion, use the phrases “number of parts” and “size of the parts” to reinforce the meaning of a fraction.
Your teacher will give you strips of paper. Each strip represents 1.
Use the strips to represent halves, fourths, and eighths.
Use one strip for each fraction and label the parts.
The purpose of this activity is for students to revisit the meaning of unit fractions with familiar and unfamiliar denominators (3, 5, 6, 10, and 12) and recall how to name and represent them.
While drawing tape diagrams to represent these fractions, students have opportunities to look for structure and to make use of the relationships between the denominators of the fractions (MP7). For example, to make a diagram with twelfths, students can cut each of 6 sixths in half.
To support students in drawing straight lines on the tape diagrams, provide access to a straightedge or ruler. Students should not, however, use rulers to measure the location of a fraction on any diagram.
This activity uses MLR1 Stronger and Clearer Each Time. Advances: Reading, Writing.
Each whole diagram represents 1. What fraction does the shaded part of each diagram represent?
Here are four blank diagrams. Each diagram represents 1. Partition each diagram and shade 1 part so that the shaded part represents the given fraction.
Suppose you use the same blank diagram to represent . Would the shaded part be larger or smaller than the shaded part in the diagram of ? Explain how you know.
MLR1 Stronger and Clearer Each Time
“Today we refreshed our memory about fractions. We used fraction strips and diagrams to represent some familiar and some new fractions.”
Based on students’ work during the lesson, choose the questions that need more discussion: