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.
This Number Talk encourages students to use the relationship between related numbers (5 and 10, and 6, 12, and 24) and properties of operations to find products. The strategies of doubling and halving elicited here will be helpful later in the lesson when students generate equivalent fractions. In describing strategies, students need to be precise in their word choice and use of language (MP6).
Find the value of each expression mentally.
In this activity, students look closely at the relationships between fractions with denominators 5, 10, and 100. Students use their observations and understanding to identify equivalent fractions and to explain why two fractions are or are not equivalent. When students analyze and criticize the reasoning presented in the activity statements and when they discuss their work with classmates, they are critiquing the reasoning of others and improving their arguments (MP3).
Andre, Lin, and Clare will represent on a number line.
Do you agree with any of them? Explain or show your reasoning.
MLR1 Stronger and Clearer Each Time
This activity gives students opportunities to practice explaining or showing whether two fractions are equivalent. Students may do so using a visual representation, by reasoning about the number and size of the fractional parts in each fraction, or by thinking about multiplicative relationships between the numbers in the given fractions.
Students participate in a Gallery Walk in which they generate equivalent fractions for the numbers on the posters. Students visit at least two of six posters (or as many as time permits). At least one poster should have two fractions (Cards A–C), and at least one should have three fractions (Cards D–F).
For the posters with two fractions (A–C), students need to generate an equivalent fraction that hasn’t already been written by others. This makes generating equivalent fractions more difficult as the activity goes on. Consider using this fact to differentiate for students who may need an additional challenge: start them at the posters with three fractions (D–F).
Around the room you will find 6 posters, each showing either 2 or 3 fractions.
With your group, visit at least 2 posters: one with 2 fractions and one with 3 fractions.
For the poster with 2 fractions:
We visited poster __________, which shows __________ and __________.
New equivalent fraction: __________
For the poster with 3 fractions:
Identify 2 fractions that are equivalent. Explain your reasoning.
We visited poster __________, which shows __________, __________, and __________.
__________ and __________ are equivalent fractions.
Select groups to share their responses and reasoning for each poster.
Highlight visual diagrams or verbal explanations that clearly show how the number and size of the parts of two fractions can differ even though the fractions are the same size.
When students explain their work on Posters D–F, ask about the non-equivalent fraction. For instance: “How did you know that and are equivalent, but is not equivalent to them?”
“Today we identified and wrote equivalent fractions, and we explained why they are equivalent."
“How can thinking about splitting each part of a whole into equal smaller parts help you know whether or not two fractions are equivalent?"