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The purpose of this activity is to elicit ideas students have about doing math. This is the first time students experience the What Do You Know About _____? routine in grade 2. Students are familiar with this routine from a previous grade, however, they may benefit from a brief review of the steps involved.
For all of the routines, consider establishing a small, discreet hand signal that students can display to indicate they have an answer they can support with reasoning. This signal could be a thumbs-up, a certain number of fingers that tells the number of responses they have, or another subtle signal. This is a quick way to see if students have had enough time to think about the problem. It also keeps students from being distracted or rushed by hands being raised around the class. Since this is the first Warm-up of the year, 15 minutes is allocated, instead of 10, to establish the structure of a routine.
The purpose of this activity is for students to demonstrate methods they have for addition and subtraction within 10. In this activity, students draw 2 cards and consider how they could add or subtract the numbers to create a value that matches one of the target numbers (0–10). Listen for the ways students think about how to find the value of sums and differences, including any sums and differences they know from memory, and how they share their thinking with their partner. If students disagree about the value of a sum or difference, encourage them to discuss their reasoning and reach an agreement (MP3).
Students may write subtraction expressions that do not match their computation. For example, students write 2−4 instead of 4−2. Ask students to use counters or cubes to represent the subtraction. Highlight that they started with 4 and took away 2 and ask them to connect this action to the expression. To stay mathematically consistent with what students will learn in later grades about operations with rational numbers, avoid language that suggests students can only subtract a smaller number from a larger number.
The purpose of the activity is for students to practice finding the value of sums and differences within 10. Students also identify addition expressions that have a value of 10. Students will work more with sums of 10 in the next lesson. This activity provides an opportunity to observe how students find sums and differences within 10, including those they know from memory.
Match each expression to the value of the sum or difference.
9
3
8
7
1
4
2
Display math community chart.
“Today we played a math game and added and subtracted within 10. What does it look and sound like to do math together as a mathematical community? What was I doing? What were you doing?” (We talked to each other and to the teacher. We had some quiet time to think. We shared our ideas. We thought about the math ideas and words we knew. You were writing down our answers. You were waiting until we gave the answers.)
| found it! | expression | |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | ||
| 1 | ||
| 2 | ||
| 3 | ||
| 4 | ||
| 5 | ||
| 6 | ||
| 7 | ||
| 8 | ||
| 9 | ||
| 10 |