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The purpose of an Estimation Exploration is to practice the skill of estimating a reasonable answer based on experience and known information. In this case, the given decimal pushes students to think in terms of increments of tenths (0.1) and to relate the fractional measurement to nearby whole numbers.
The person in the image is 1.7 meters tall.
Estimate the wingspan of the eagle in meters.
Record an estimate that is:
| too low | about right | too high |
|---|---|---|
The purpose of this activity is for students to apply what they know about tenths and hundredths and decimal notation to arrange two sets of numbers in order, from least to greatest, and then greatest to least. A number line is given, but students are likely to start seeing its limits as a tool for comparing and ordering decimals. It takes time to plot each value on the number line, the scale of the number line accommodates only a small range of numbers (numbers like 1.25 and 12.05 would go beyond the line), and there are other ways to compare two decimals.
Monitor for and select students with the following approaches for ordering the numbers in the second problem to share in the Activity Synthesis:
The approaches are sequenced from more concrete to more abstract to prompt students to compare decimals using different strategies and make connections to reasoning with place value, which will be helpful in the next activity. Aim to elicit both key mathematical ideas and a variety of student voices, especially students who haven’t shared recently. For an example of each approach, look at the Student Responses.
Order the numbers from least to greatest. Use the number line if it is helpful.
1.08
0.08
0.80
0.9
0.45
0.54
Order the numbers from greatest to least. Use the number line if it is helpful.
1.25
0.95
0.4
0.09
12.05
0.25
In this activity, students compare and order decimals in the context of running times. Students compare and order two-digit whole numbers, prompting students to be more attentive to the place value of the digits. The context of track and field may be unfamiliar, so time is built into the Launch to support students in making sense of the problem.
When students look carefully at the meaning of each digit in the numbers and interpret them in terms of the running context, they are reasoning abstractly and quantitatively and observing place value structure (MP2, MP7).
This activity uses MLR6 Three Reads. Advances: reading, listening, representing
The table shows 8 of the top runners in the Women’s 400-Meter event. Here are the running times that put them in the world’s top 25 for this event.
48.37
49.3
48.7
49.26
49.07
49.28
48.83
49.05
The names in the table are arranged in order by the fastest running times. The fastest runner is at the top.
| runner | time (seconds) | year achieved |
|---|---|---|
| Shaunae Miller-Uibo (Bahamas) | 2019 | |
| Sanya Richards (U.S.A.) | 2006 | |
| Valerie Brisco-Hooks (U.S.A.) | 1984 | |
| Chandra Cheesborough (U.S.A.) | 1984 | |
| Tonique Williams-Darling (Bahamas) | 2004 | |
| Allyson Felix (U.S.A.) | 2015 | |
| Pauline Davis (Bahamas) | 1996 | |
| Lorraine Fenton (Jamaica) | 2002 |
Put the running times in order, from least to greatest, to match each time with the runner.
How many seconds did it take Sanya Richards to run 400 meters?
What is Allyson Felix’s running time?
“Today we compared decimals and put them in order by their size.”
Display these decimals with missing digits:
“Are there numbers that we can compare, even though they are all missing digits?” (Yes, we know 1__.__ __ is greater than all the others and 2. __ is greater than 0.__ and 0.1__.)
“Are there numbers that we can’t compare?” (0.__, 0.1__, and __.2)
“What makes it possible for us to compare some decimals but not others?” (Sample responses: We know that a number with tens is greater than numbers with only ones. We can compare numbers that are greater than 1 and those less than 1. We can’t compare numbers when the digit in the place with the largest value is not known.)