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 many different questions could be asked about a situation, which will be useful when students solve problems in a later activity.
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
The purpose of this activity is for students to represent and solve “how many in each group?” problems using whatever strategy and visual representation make sense to them. Students create a poster of their solution to the first problem with a partner. In the next activity, they participate in a Gallery Walk of the posters.
Monitor for students who represent the situation with:
Solve each problem. Show your thinking using objects, a drawing, or a diagram.
The purpose of this activity is for students to consider what is the same and what is different about the ways that they solved a “how many in each group?” problem in the previous activity. As students visit the posters, identify 2–3 students who show particularly well that this problem is about finding how many there are in each group. Select those students to share in the next activity.
The purpose of this activity is for students to consider what is the same and what is different about the “how many groups?” and “how many in each group?” problems they solved in a previous lesson and in this lesson. The discussion should highlight that in “how many groups?” problems we know the size of each group and in “how many in each group?” problems we know how many groups there are. In order to describe how the problems are the same and how they are different, students attend to the structure of the problems—what is given in each situation and what is unknown (MP7).
A farmer puts 24 apples in boxes. She puts 8 apples in each box. How many boxes are there?
A farmer packs 20 apples in 4 boxes. She packs the same number of apples in each box. How many apples are in each box?
Discuss with your partner:
“Yesterday, we solved problems that asked about how many equal groups we could make. Today we solved problems that asked about how many things are in each equal group. Both of these ideas are related to division.”
“Division is finding the number of groups or finding the size of each group when we share, or separate a total into groups of equal size.”