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The purpose of an Estimation Exploration is for students to practice the skill of estimating a reasonable answer based on experience and known information. In this lesson, students will find the perimeter and area of rectangles and think about the size of the windows in this image to prepare them for this work.
What is the area of 1 window?
Record an estimate that is:
| too low | about right | too high |
|---|---|---|
The purpose of this activity is for students to plot points that represent the length and width of a rectangle with a given perimeter. Since the perimeter is twice the length plus twice the width, decreasing the length by a certain amount will mean that the width has to increase by the same amount for the perimeter to stay the same.
Monitor for and select students with the following approaches for Jada’s rectangle if it is 2.5 cm long to share in the Activity Synthesis:
The approaches are sequenced from more concrete to more abstract to help students understand the relationship between the length and width of rectangles with a fixed perimeter. 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.
| length (cm) | width (cm) |
|---|---|
Represent the length and width of each rectangle as a point on the coordinate grid.
The purpose of this activity is to investigate the possible lengths and widths of a rectangle with a given area. Since the area is the product of length and width, this means that the main operation being used is multiplication or division, contrasting with the previous activity where students investigated the perimeter which is the sum of the side lengths of a rectangle. This means that the calculations are more complex and some of the coordinates of the points that students plot will either be decimals or fractions depending on how students express them. There are some important common characteristics between the lengths and widths for a given area and for a given perimeter which will be examined in the Activity Synthesis (MP7, MP8):
| length (cm) | width (cm) |
|---|---|
Represent the length and width of each rectangle as a point on the coordinate grid.
“Today we plotted lengths and widths of rectangles on the coordinate grid.”
Display the graphs from the student solutions to the two activities together.
“How are the graphs the same?” (They both show lengths and widths of rectangles. When the length increases, the width decreases. When the length decreases, the width increases.)
“How are the graphs different?” (The length and width pairs with perimeter 12 are nicely organized. When the length increases by 1, the width decreases by 1. The length and width pairs with area 16 don't follow a clear pattern. I would not be able to guess any other values. I would have to calculate.)
We generated patterns and analyzed relationships between two different patterns.
Example: Both patterns start with 0.
| rule 1: Add 8. | 0 | 8 | 16 | 24 | 32 | 40 |
| rule 2: Add 2. | 0 | 2 | 4 | 6 | 8 | 10 |
Each number in Rule 1’s pattern is 4 times the value of the corresponding number in Rule 2’s pattern. Each number in Rule 2’s pattern is times the value of the corresponding number in Rule 1’s pattern. We represented 2 patterns together as points on a coordinate grid.
We also used points on a coordinate grid to represent other situations, such as the length and width of rectangles with a given area or perimeter.
If students express or show other evidence that they are not yet sure how to represent or reason about the width of Jada’s rectangle, consider asking: