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This Warm-up prompts students to carefully analyze and compare features of expressions. In making comparisons, students have a reason to use language precisely (MP6). The activity also enables the teacher to hear the terminologies students know and how they talk about these features of expressions such as:
Students work in this lesson to express decimals in many different forms, and this Warm-up gives students some familiarity thinking about some of those different forms.
Which 3 go together?
A
B
C
D
In a previous course, students multiplied a decimal fraction by a whole number. In previous lessons, students wrote decimal fractions in decimal form. The purpose of this activity is for students to use the expanded form of a decimal number to the thousandth. Students relate expanded form to both diagrams and decimal numbers. The expanded form of a decimal number highlights the value of each digit. For the number 0.835, for example, the 8 represents 8 tenths. This decimal is shown in expanded form by writing the as . Students practice relating decimals, diagrams, and expanded form and then are formally introduced to the term expanded form, as it applies to decimals, in the Activity Synthesis (MP2). The notation of expanded form is a generalization of what students saw in a previous grade with whole numbers.
This activity uses MLR3 Critique, Correct, Clarify. Advances: reading, writing, representing
MLR3 Critique, Correct, Clarify
The purpose of this activity is for students to practice different ways of expressing decimal numbers to the thousandth. In addition to standard decimal digit form, these ways include:
Represent each number in as many ways as you can.
“Today we represented decimal numbers in many ways.”
Display 0.315.
“What are some different ways you can represent this number? What is your favorite way?” (Three hundred fifteen thousandths, , , or I could draw a diagram. My favorite way is the decimal because it's the shortest.)