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What do you notice? What do you wonder?
In previous grades, students worked with metric units of length. The purpose of this activity is to reason about the size of a kilometer. Students consider the distance they might walk or run, perhaps to and from school or during sports practice, and they also consider other lengths with which they might be familiar, such as going across town or taking a bike ride, or the distance to a friend's house. Building a sense and an understanding of large numbers or distances or other measurements takes time and practice. The intent of this activity is to begin this work informally. A variety of answers should be expected, and the goal of the Activity Synthesis is to share this variety and come to a general agreement of approximately how far is a kilometer, or some number of kilometers.
Decide whether each distance is less than 1 kilometer, about 1 kilometer, or greater than 1 kilometer.
Students calculate the areas of different American states in order to grasp the enormity of a floating area of trash in the Pacific Ocean. It turns out that this area is substantially larger than most American states! Students will use the standard multiplication algorithm and estimation as they calculate the areas of different states. Estimation plays an important role because the area of New Mexico is a product of 2 three-digit numbers. Students are prepared to make and understand this calculation, which also provides them an opportunity to see the power of estimation. The area of New Mexico can be readily compared with the area of the Great Garbage Patch, without calculating the exact area. For the last question, students use the area of the states they calculated and apply that to a map of the United States.
Students model with mathematics when they make assumptions about the states, for example that they are approximated by rectangles, in order to calculate or estimate their areas, and when they choose states with areas approximately equal to the area of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch (MP4).
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is a large area in the Pacific Ocean where trash has accumulated. By 2022, some estimates indicated that the garbage covered about 1,600,000 square kilometers of the surface of the ocean.
Circle an area on the map of the continental United States that estimates the area of the garbage patch. Explain or show your reasoning.
“Today we looked at the Great Pacific Garbage Patch which has an area of about 1,600,000 square kilometers. We saw how big that is by comparing it to different states.”
“If the Great Pacific Garbage Patch was a rectangle, what could be its side lengths?” (It could be 1,600,000 kilometers by 1 kilometer but 1,600,000 kilometers is too long. It could be 1,250 kilometers by 1,250 kilometers. I could multiply one of the lengths of New Mexico by 5, so it could be about 3,000 kilometers by 550 kilometers.)
“Much of the garbage in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is plastic. Tomorrow we will investigate the amount of recyclable plastic we produce each year.”