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The purpose of this Warm-up is for students to experience part of the Questions about Us routine. Students continue to engage in this routine throughout the section, focused on answering, “How many of us are here today?” In this activity, students develop ideas for how to represent how many students are in class today. Student ideas should drive which representation is created. Save the poster from this Warm-up for comparison in the next lesson. As students observe that counting their classmates and counting a representation of their classmates give the same result, they are building an understanding of how numbers represent how many there are in a collection (MP2).
The purpose of this activity is for students to count their collection in a way that makes sense to them and to share how they counted with a partner. Showing and explaining how many objects are in the collection and how they counted will be useful when students represent their count in the next lesson.
Most students should be given collections with 6–10 objects. Based on formative assessment data collected in previous sections, adjust the number of objects in collections for individual students.
Students are provided with counting mats and 5-frames to help them accurately count or organize their collections. Students use appropriate tools strategically as they choose which tools help them count their collections (MP5). Additional collections can be provided to allow students to choose a new collection to count.
Optional
The purpose of this optional activity is for students to use a counting mat as a tool to help them keep track of which objects have been counted. This activity will help students who are not counting all objects or are counting some objects more than one time. Use formative assessment data from previous sections and observation during the first activity of this lesson to identify those students.
This activity also serves as further formative assessment on students’ counting concepts, including one-to-one matching and understanding that the last number tells us “how many.” This activity can be used with a small group or the whole class. Students who do not need this optional activity may benefit from additional time working in centers.
None
The purpose of this activity is for students to choose from activities that focus on using math tools or picture books. Students choose from any of the previously introduced stages of these centers:
Choose a center.
Geoblocks
Connecting Cubes
Pattern Blocks
Picture Books
“Today we counted collections of objects. Did you use any math tools to help you count? How did they help you count?”
“We also explained to our partners how we counted. What are some words you used to explain how you counted?”