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The purpose of this Choral Count is for students to practice counting by ones starting at a number other than one. These understandings help students make the transition from counting all to counting on when adding and subtracting.
The purpose of this activity is for students to find differences using methods they choose. As students work, they may feel more comfortable with one method than another. The numbers were chosen to encourage different methods (counting on and taking away), so students can consider the numbers in a specific expression as they find the difference. During the Activity Synthesis, students share which method they used for a specific problem and why they chose it (MP3).
The purpose of this activity is for students to solve different types of story problems involving teen numbers. Each story problem can be solved using either addition or subtraction. Students may use either operation for the second and third problems and any method that makes sense to them. If they write equations to match the stories, they should be able to explain how the story and equation match (MP2).
Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.
12 pencils are on the table.
The teacher picks up 7.
How many pencils are still on the table?
Clare gets 8 glue sticks from the red table.
She gets some more from the blue table.
Now she has 15 glue sticks.
How many did she get from the blue table?
Kiran has 17 crayons.
He gives some to his friends.
Now he has 9 crayons.
How many did he give to his friends?
Display .
“Today we used different methods to solve story problems and find unknown numbers in equations. Talk to your partner about how you can find the unknown number in this equation using addition or subtraction.”
Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.