The purpose of this activity is for students to equally divide sandwiches in situations where the number of portions does not evenly divide the number of sandwiches. Students select the number of people sharing and the number of sandwiches from a small set of deliberately chosen numbers. Depending on their choice, each share may be less than a full sandwich or more than a full sandwich. This encourages students to make sense of the problem and persevere in solving it (MP1). The focus of the Activity Synthesis is on different ways students choose to make equal shares and how they know that the shares are equal. Many of the approaches for dividing the sandwiches equally are examined in detail in the next activity. In this activity, students explain how they know the shares are equal. Student representations may include coloring to show the equal shares.
Monitor for and select students with the following approaches to share in the Activity Synthesis:
- Choose numbers so each person gets one or two whole sandwiches and a fraction of a sandwich.
- Choose numbers so each person gets less than a full sandwich.
The approaches will later be displayed side by side to help students relate equal shares of objects to division and to fractions. Aim to elicit both key mathematical ideas and a variety of student voices, especially students who haven’t shared recently. For an example for each approach, look at the Student Responses.
MLR1 Stronger and Clearer Each Time. Synthesis: Before the whole-class discussion, give students time to meet with 2–3 partners to share and get feedback on their response to how much sandwich each person gets. Invite listeners to ask questions, to press for details and to suggest mathematical language. Give students 2–3 minutes to revise their written explanation based on the feedback they receive.
Advances: Writing, Speaking, Listening