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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. Making an estimate or a range of reasonable answers with incomplete information is a part of modeling with mathematics (MP4).
How many bees are in the image?
Record an estimate that is:
| too low | about right | too high |
|---|---|---|
The purpose of this activity is for students to use rounding skills to make sense of numbers in the context of insect populations. Students use given numerical facts about insects to determine what a variety of numbers could represent. For many of the numbers, several choices are possible. For example, students may say that 1,794 represents the number of days a queen ant lives or the number of eggs a queen bee lays in a day. When students determine a quantity that a number could represent in a situation, they model with mathematics (MP4).
Here are some facts about insects.
Termites
In some species, the mature queen may produce around 40,000 eggs a day.
Odorous House Ants
There are 12,000–22,000 possible species.
Honey Bees
Here are some numbers that could represent facts about termites, house ants, and honey bees. What might each number represent?
| number | what it might represent |
|---|---|
| 2.4 | |
| 8 | |
| 487 | |
| 1,794 | |
| 6,905 | |
| 20,799 | |
| 530,097 |
The purpose of this activity is for students to investigate how a bee population changes over time. Population modeling is an important application of mathematics in many fields of study such as demography, biology, and infectious diseases. Students use a simplified model to show population change over time by using the number of individuals added and subtracted during each month.
In this activity, students are given some of the numbers and are to reason whether they need to add or subtract to fill in the missing information. When students model a situation using a representation such as an equation, they model with mathematics (MP4).
An entomologist records the number of bees in their beehive over the course of several months. They record:
Unfortunately, some of the entries in the table are missing.
Complete the missing information in the table.
| month | bees in the hive at the beginning of the month | new bees | bees that left the hive |
|---|---|---|---|
| May | 20,000 | 9,378 | 342 |
| June | 15,870 | 970 | |
| July | 14,965 | ||
| August | 58,107 | 28,980 | |
| September | 30,017 | No data | No data |
“Today we explored how the population of bees can change over time.”
“What did you learn today about the mathematics an entomologist might use as part of their work?” (They use numbers to describe insect populations and to keep track of the number of insects in a colony. They use big and small numbers and they add and subtract a variety of numbers.)
Consider having students respond to the previous question as a journal prompt.