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 Warm-up is to elicit the idea that positional words and the names of shapes can be helpful in describing objects, which will be useful when students find and describe solid shapes in their environment in a later activity.
What do you notice?
What do you wonder?
The purpose of this activity is for students to identify and describe solid shapes in their environment (MP4, MP6). The shape walk can occur in many locations, such as a classroom, school, gym, playground, or library. Additional objects may need to be added to the environment to ensure that there are examples of a variety of solid shapes. Students may identify objects that are not exact examples of solid shapes. If this happens, consider acknowledging similarities between the shapes. (“This shape has a point like a cone, but it is not a cone.”) Students use their own language to describe the solid shapes and are not required to use shapes’ names. As students identify solid shapes, encourage them to describe the location of the object, using positional words, such as “above,” “below,” “beside,” and “next to.”
None
The purpose of this activity is for students to choose from activities that offer practice with number and shape concepts.
Students choose any previously introduced stage from these centers:
Choose a center.
Build Shapes
Geoblocks
Counting Collections
Match Mine
Shake and Spill
“Today we looked around for objects that look like solid shapes.”
“What are some solid shapes that you can find at home?” (pieces of fruit such as oranges or grapes, balls, boxes, cans)
Share and record responses.
Display a cube.
“What are some objects that look like cubes that you can find at home?” (tissue box, blocks, dice)
Share and record responses.