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This Warm-up prompts students to make sense of a problem before solving it, by familiarizing themselves with a context and the mathematics that might be involved. While students may notice and wonder about many things, highlight observations or questions about the relative sizes of the measurements in different units.
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
| animal | distance traveled in a day |
|---|---|
| three-toed sloth | 30 meters |
| snail | 2,500 centimeters |
| dromedary | 40 kilometers |
| giant tortoise | 300 meters |
In this activity, students apply their knowledge of centimeters, meters, and kilometers, perform unit conversions, and reason multiplicatively to compare and order distances.
Students have the opportunity to decide which unit to use for making comparisons (that is, whether to convert all distances to meters, to centimeters, or to kilometers). They may find it most practical to use meters because two of the distances are already in meters, and because they know how the other two units are related to meters.
Students reason abstractly and quantitatively as they think about which unit to use to make comparisons (MP2), and use place-value understanding to make the conversions (MP7).
This activity uses MLR1 Stronger and Clearer Each Time. Advances: reading, writing.
Here are estimates of the farthest distances some animals travel in one day.
| animal | distance traveled in a day |
|---|---|
| three-toed sloth | 30 meters |
| snail | 2,500 centimeters |
| dromedary | 40 kilometers |
| giant tortoise | 300 meters |
Put the animals and their travel distances in order, from shortest to longest. Explain or show your reasoning.
Do you agree with each statement? Explain your reasoning.
MLR1 Stronger and Clearer Each Time
This activity invites students to apply their knowledge of liters and milliliters and multiplicative reasoning to solve a problem about water bottles in different sizes. Students are prompted to express all the quantities in milliliters, so no decisions are needed in terms of the unit to use, but students do need to reason, deductively or logically, to solve the problem. As they work to eliminate possibilities, draw conclusions, and explain their thinking to others, students practice constructing logical arguments (MP3).
Here are 6 water bottles arranged from largest to smallest size.
Here are four clues about the amount of water each bottle holds.
Use the clues to find out the amount of water, in milliliters, that each bottle size holds.
A: ___________________ mL
B: ___________________ mL
C: ___________________ mL
D: ___________________ mL
E: ___________________ mL
F: ___________________ mL
“Today we solved some problems that involved comparing and ordering measurements in different units. Let’s reflect on the process of solving those problems. Take a few quiet minutes to think about these reflection questions and write down your responses.”
Display and read the following:
“What math did you do to find out which animal traveled the farthest, to see if a statement was true, and to figure out the sizes of water bottles?” (We converted measurements from one unit to another, compared numbers and put them in order, and multiplied or divided numbers.)
“Which parts of the problem-solving process did you enjoy or find interesting?”
“Which parts of the problem-solving process were challenging or new to you?” (Deciding on which unit to use, multiplying large numbers, knowing where to start a logic puzzle, or getting unstuck along the way.)