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The purpose of this True or False is to elicit strategies and understandings students have for finding differences between two numbers. These understandings help students build fluency in addition and subtraction, while preparing them to think about distances between two points.
Students may use estimation or place value understanding to solve the problems (MP7).
Decide if each statement is true or false. Be prepared to explain your reasoning.
This activity prompts students to interpret and represent situations about distances and use multiple operations to solve problems. In the third problem, a piece of information is withheld. Students will need to make sense of what’s missing and find out that information before the question could be answered. Throughout the activity, students reason abstractly and quantitatively as they interpret the diagram and use the information to solve problems (MP2).
Mai’s cousin is in middle school. She travels from her homeroom to math, then English, history, and science. When she finishes her science class, she takes the same path back to her homeroom.
Mai’s cousin makes the same trip 5 times each week. The distances between the classes are shown.
Each week, Mai’s cousin makes 3 round trips from her homeroom to her music class. The total distance traveled on those 3 round trips is 2,364 feet.
How far away is the music room from her homeroom? Explain or show your reasoning.
This activity gives students another opportunity to use multiple operations to model the quantities in a situation and to solve problems involving large numbers. Students interpret the quantities in context, reason about them abstractly as they perform computations, and then return to the context to interpret the results. As they do so, students are reasoning quantitatively and abstractly (MP2).
Students may choose to answer the first problem by dividing a five-digit number by a one-digit divisor. Though finding a quotient of a five-digit dividend is not an expectation, this particular number ends in a 0. Students can use the division strategies they’ve learned so far and what they know about the structure of numbers in base ten to find the quotient (MP7).
The table shows the number of steps Han takes each week for the first 3 weeks. How much does the number of steps drop from the first week to the second week?
| week 1 | week 2 | week 3 | week 4 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 32,550 | 28,098 | 36,249 |
“Today we solved problems that involved numbers with four or more digits. Some of those problems could be interpreted in more than one way.”
“In the fitness challenge activity, how did you think about finding Han’s steps each day? Did you think of it in terms of multiplication (what number times 7 is 32,550?) or in terms of division (what is 32,550 divided by 7?)? Is one way of thinking more convenient? Why or why not?”
To facilitate discussion, display equations such as:
“How did you think about finding Han’s steps in week 4? Did you think in terms of addition (what number must be added to 96,897 to make 120,000?) or subtraction (what is the difference between 120,000 and 96,897?)?”
Display equations such as: