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The purpose of this Estimation Exploration is for students to use their experience with the number line, decimals, and fractions to estimate the value of a number located on the number line. Students may answer with a fraction but are likely to write a decimal since they have been working with decimals for the last several lessons. In the Activity Synthesis, students reflect on how having tick marks for each tenth would help improve their estimate.
What number might be represented on the point on the number line?
Record an estimate that is:
| too low | about right | too high |
|---|---|---|
The purpose of this activity is for students to use place value understanding to accurately label number lines and then estimate the value of a labeled point. When they label the tick marks, students will use their knowledge that a tenth is a tenth of one and a hundredth is a tenth of a tenth. When they estimate the value of the labeled point, students will also use their understanding that there are ten thousandths in each hundredth. This gives students an opportunity to make sense of each quantity and place it accurately on the number line (MP2).
The activity begins with a group discussion about how Jada labeled a number on the number line. This prepares students for the work of the activity by:
As students discuss and justify their decisions, they share a mathematical claim and the thinking behind it (MP3).
Jada tries to locate 15.53 on the number line. Do you think she accurately located the number?
A number is located between 2 tick marks on each number line. Label those tick marks. Then estimate the number.
Optional
Round each number to the nearest whole number, tenth, and hundredth.
| nearest whole number | nearest tenth | nearest hundredth | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 34.482 | |||
| 99.909 | |||
| 5.555 | |||
| 19.509 |
“Today we rounded decimals to the nearest whole, tenth, and hundredth.”
Display:
Tyler said that 0.345 rounds to 0.3. Jada said 0.345 rounds to 0.35.
“Who do you agree with? Why?” (I agree with Tyler if we’re rounding to the tenths place. I agree with Jada if we’re rounding to the hundredths place.)
“Write three other numbers that round to 0.3 to the nearest tenth and three other numbers that round to 0.35 to the nearest hundredth.” (0.342, 0.32, 0.299 round to 0.3, and 0.351, 0.349, 0.352 round to 0.35.)