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Which 3 go together?
The purpose of this activity is for students to use words to represent three-digit numbers. Students are given numbers represented in different ways and asked to represent the same number in another way, including using words. Spelling numbers might present a challenge for some students. As students learn to spell and write numbers, encourage them to say the name aloud and then write it down. Also encourage them to use what they know about place value to say and write the name. Consider using an anchor chart or poster with words, including the words for numbers 0 to 20 and the multiples of ten, to provide support in this activity and later lessons.
Fill in the blanks. Represent 248 with words.
two ___________________ forty-________________
Fill in the blanks. Represent 562 with words.
______________ hundred _____________- _______
Represent this number with words.
Represent 627 with words.
Represent with words.
Represent three hundred eighteen in 2 different ways.
The purpose of this activity is for students to represent numbers in all the ways they have seen so far in this unit. Students are given a number in one form and they represent the same number in different ways. In the Synthesis, students share which representations are most helpful. When students relate the different ways to represent a three-digit number (words, expanded form, diagrams, numbers) they deepen their understanding of the structure of the base-ten system (MP7)
Represent the number on your poster. Use:
If you have time: Represent the number using tens and ones. Then represent the number in a different way.
“Today you had the chance to represent numbers in different ways and make connections across representations.”
“While you walked around, what representation did you look for first to help you identify the number? Why?” (I looked at the base-ten numeral first and compared it to the expanded form. Then I checked the others.)
“What questions do you have about three-digit numbers or any of the representations you saw today?”
We learned that a hundred is a group of 10 tens or 100 ones. We represented hundreds with base-ten blocks and diagrams. We represented numbers using hundreds, tens, and ones. We learned to read and write 3-digit numbers. We used the expanded form to write a number as the sum of the values of its digits.
3 hundreds 5 tens 7 ones
357
three hundred fifty-seven