Not all roles available for this page.
Sign in to view assessments and invite other educators
Sign in using your existing Kendall Hunt account. If you don’t have one, create an educator account.
The purpose of this Number Talk is to elicit the strategies and understandings students have for fraction multiplication. The whole number 60 is intentionally selected to represent the minutes in one hour. These understandings help students develop fluency and will be helpful later in this lesson when students will need to interpret the number of minutes as fractional parts of one hour.
1 minute: quiet think time.
Find the value of each expression mentally.
The purpose of this activity is for students to think about different activities they might participate in during free time, to generate data based on the activities, and to define categories for the data. When students collect data and define categories for the data, they model with mathematics (MP4). Encourage students to convert the time for their activities from minutes to hours. Students may notice that some fractions are more useful in the context of time, such as halves and quarters of an hour. Students will further explore further the relationship between time and fractions in the Activity Synthesis.
Imagine you have 2 hours of free time this weekend that you can spend any way you like.
The purpose of this activity is for students to make and analyze line plots. In this activity, students analyze the free-time data collected in the previous activity. They make observations and comparisons to tell the story of their data set.
Your teacher will assign a poster with a data set for one of the categories from the previous activity.
“Today, we used fractions of hours to talk about how we might spend free time. In the Warm-up, we saw these expressions.”
Display and .
“What connections do you notice between these expressions and fractions of an hour?” (There are 60 minutes in 1 hour, so we can see that of an hour is 1 hour and 15 minutes or minutes.)
“Today, we also made and analyzed line plots.”
“Who might be interested in collecting and analyzing data such as this? Why?” (Makers of children’s toys, stores, and advertisers want to know how kids spend their time so that they can make money or sell the things kids want. Parents and educators want to know how kids spend time to see if it is what they should be doing.)
Consider having students respond to the previous question as a journal prompt.