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The purpose of this Estimation Exploration is to practice the skill of making a reasonable estimate for a number based on its location on a number line. Students give a range of reasonable answers when given incomplete information. They have the opportunity to revise their thinking as additional information is provided. The Activity Synthesis should focus on discussing what other benchmarks (multiples of 10) would help make a better estimate. The actual number is revealed in the Launch of the first activity.
This Estimation Exploration encourages students to use what they know about place value to determine the value of the two tick marks the point lies between and then reason about where it is located (MP7).
What number is represented by the point?
Record an estimate that is:
| too low | about right | too high |
|---|---|---|
The purpose of this activity is for students to use their understanding of place value and the relative position of numbers within 1,000,000 to partition and place numbers on a number line. Students place four related numbers on a number line and consider relationships between digits to determine how to partition a number line.
The numbers have the same non-zero digits but with different place values, allowing students to observe the closely related values of the tick marks (MP7) and the identical location on the different number lines of the numbers they plot (MP8).
Locate and label each number on the number line.
Locate and label each number on the number line.
In this activity, students place a set of numbers that are each ten times as much as the one before it on the same number line. In doing so, they notice the impact of multiplying a number by ten on its magnitude. Unlike before, the number lines have no or fewer intermediate tick marks, prompting students to think about how to partition the lines in order to plot their assigned number.
Your teacher will assign a number for you to locate on the given number line.
Decide where your assigned number falls on this number line. Explain your reasoning.
Work with your group to label the tick marks and agree on where each of the numbers should be placed.
“Today we located and analyzed sets of large numbers on a number line. In each set, each number was 10 times as much as the number before it. Let’s look at the number lines from the first activity.”
“How might we use multiplication equations to show the relationship between each point on the number line?” (, , )
“What is the relationship between the values of the labels on each number line?” (Each new number line has tick marks that are valued at 10 times as much as the labels on the previous number line.)
We worked with numbers to the hundred-thousands.
First, we used base-ten blocks, 10-by-10 grids, and base-ten diagrams to name, write, and represent multi-digit numbers within 1,000,000. We wrote the numbers in expanded form so we can see the value of each digit. Example:
Next, we learned the value of a digit in a multi-digit number is ten times the value of the same digit in the place to its right. Example:
We used both multiplication and division equations to represent this relationship.
Finally, we analyzed the “ten times” relationships by locating numbers on number lines.