The purpose of this activity is for students to calculate areas in context. Students are not offered an area diagram but rather an image of a flag. Students may label the image of the flag with measurements or make their own area diagram. The lengths are not always presented in fraction form so students may rewrite them as fractions before calculating areas or they may use the distributive property of multiplication and multiply the whole number and fractional parts separately before adding them. Students reason abstractly and quantitatively when they interpret the given information about the flags and make calculations to solve problems (MP2).
MLR7 Compare and Connect. Invite students to prepare a visual display that shows the strategy they used to calculate the area of different parts of the flag. Encourage students to include details that will help others interpret their thinking. For example, specific language, using different colors, shading, arrows, labels, notes, diagrams, or drawings. Give students time to investigate each other’s work. During the whole-class discussion, ask students, “What did the approaches have in common?”, “How were they different?”, and “Did anyone solve the problem the same way, but would explain it differently?”
Advances: Representing, Conversing