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.
This Number Talk encourages students to rely on the properties of operations and what they know about multiplication of a fraction and a whole number to mentally solve problems. The understandings elicited here will be helpful later in the lesson when students complete or create their own Number Talk.
Find the value of each expression mentally.
A Number Talk encourages students to look for structure and relationships that can help them reason about expressions. This activity puts students in the mindset of a Number Talk writer. It prompts them to anticipate some ways that others might decompose, rearrange, and compose numbers, or to otherwise make use of structure to find the value of an expression. The work here will be helpful as students consider the numbers and numerical relationships to use as they write their own expressions later.
Here are 2 addition expressions. Think of at least 2 different ways to find the value of each sum mentally.
Here are 3 subtraction expressions. Think of at least 2 different ways to find the value of each difference mentally.
In this activity, students use their understanding of place value and knowledge of operations on numbers to write new multiplication and division expressions. Students study the given expressions and their relationships, and consider how they could find the value of each expression mentally. Next, they propose new expressions to complete each Number Talk.
Here are 3 division expressions. Find the value of each quotient mentally and think about how they might be related.
___________________
Write a new division expression whose value can be found more easily after working through the first three expressions.
Here are 2 multiplication expressions. Analyze them and think about how they might be related.
___________________
___________________
Write 2 new expressions. Explain your reasoning for each expression.
Optional
In this optional activity, students are given four expressions—three expressions involve operations of two whole numbers and one involves multiplication of a whole number and a fraction. Students choose one expression and write three new ones to create a Number Talk activity.
Students have considerably more freedom to decide the direction of subsequent expressions, but should be just as prepared to explain the rationale behind their expressions. Expect the increased openness to be a greater cognitive lift for students.
For the Activity Synthesis, ask each group of 2 students to test their set by presenting it to another group and attending to how others reason about their expressions.
Here are 4 expressions you could use to start a Number Talk activity.
Choose one starting expression. Think of at least 2 different ways to find its value mentally.
Write 3 expressions to create a Number Talk activity.
___________________ (starting expression)
___________________
___________________
___________________
“Today (or the past couple of days) you’ve used your mathematical understanding to write expressions for Number Talk activities. You also have created an original set.“
“What were important things you considered as you wrote expressions for a Number Talk? Why were these things important?”
“What were some challenges in creating a brand new Number Talk, or in completing a partial set?”