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This Warm-up prompts students to carefully analyze and compare ways to represent multiplicative comparison. In making comparisons, students have a reason to use language precisely (MP6). The activity also enables the teacher to hear the terminology students use to talk about the characteristics of multiplicative comparison representations.
Which 3 go together?
The purpose of this activity is for students to represent and solve a two-step story problem involving multiplicative comparison, in ways that make the most sense to them. As they make connections between strategies for solving multi-step problems, they also compare representations that show multiplicative comparison more discretely (diagrams) and those that show the comparison more abstractly (expressions).
MLR6: Three Reads
On Thursday, Mai purchased a biography for \$9 and a comic book for \$4. The amount of total sales that day at the book fair was 8 times as much money as Mai spent.
What was the amount of total sales for the book fair on Thursday?
On Friday, the sales at the book fair were \$13 in the morning and 8 times as much as that in the afternoon.
What was the amount of total sales for the book fair on Friday?
The purpose of this activity is for students to apply what they learned about interpreting and representing multiplicative comparison to solve multi-step problems. They must interpret what values are unknown and make a plan for how to represent these values.
Students reason abstractly and quantitatively when they make sense of the given information and use it to find the different numbers of books (MP2).
For this year’s book fair, a school ordered 15 science experiment books and 6 times as many picture books.
Last year, the school ordered 4 times as many picture books and 4 times as many science experiment books than they did this year.
How many total books were ordered last year? Show or explain your reasoning.
“Today we solved multiplicative comparison problems that involved more than one step.”
“When were diagrams helpful or not as helpful while solving multiplicative comparison problems?” (With large numbers, it takes too much space and time to draw diagrams. Sometimes starting to draw a diagram helps you understand what expression to write.)
“What did you have to pay attention to when you solved two-step problems?” (Think about what the problem is about and what can be counted or measured. Make sure to answer the question that is asked.)
“What did you learn from other students about solving two-step problems?” (I noticed that I missed a step when I heard or saw what my partner shared about Thursday and Friday book sales. I can’t stop with just the first step.)