ACORN HOARDING [DAY 4]

GROWING & SHRINKING LINEAR PATTERNS

Explore growing & shrinking visual patterns and linear relationships by constructing pattern rules in words, tables of values and equations.

Intentionality

Math Talk

Visual Math Talk Prompt #1

Visual Math Talk Prompt #2

Visual Math Talk Prompt #3

Purposeful Practice

Resources & Downloads

Educator Discussion Area

Intentionality & Unit Overview

Length of Unit: 5 Days

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Students will extend shrinking linear patterns. Examine graphical representations of patterns. They will make near and far predictions and describe the pattern in words.

Intentionality…

The purpose of the Day 4 activities is to reinforce key concepts from Day 3. Students will engage in a math talk using graphical representations of shrinking patterns and will have an opportunity to complete independent purposeful practice. The math talk and purposeful practice serve to develop a deeper understanding of the following big ideas. 

  • Patterns can be extended because they are repetitive by nature.
  • Pattern rules are generalizations about a pattern, and they can be described in words.
  • A pattern can be extended to make a prediction. 
  • For far predictions, calculations are required for efficiency. 
  • In a shrinking pattern, the values increase.
  • In a linear pattern, the values increase/decrease at the same rate.
  • Graphical representations of linear growing and shrinking patterns appear as straight lines.

Math Talk

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Visual Math Talk Prompt #1

Begin playing the following visual number talk prompt video and be ready to pause the video to allow for think time.

After the graph is displayed for students, pause the video and ask students:

What do you know about this pattern?

Jot down everything you know.

Give students an opportunity to turn and talk as well as share out to the group before presenting them with these questions:

What type of pattern is this, how do you know?
What context could be represented by this pattern?
What is the pattern rule?
Predict another value in this pattern not represented by this graph. Defend your answer.

Students may have already shared that this graph was a decreasing linear relationship previously, however it might be helpful to ensure that all students recognize this and understand why that is true.

Students may have also shared different contexts that could be represented by this relationship. Be intentional about ensuring students know that many contexts could work for this relationship and the one we will share here is not the right context, but rather just one of many possibilities that could work. 

When students share the pattern rule, be mindful to listen for students referencing characteristics of this particular decreasing linear relationship. Are students referencing the initial value or rate of change without necessarily realizing it? Be sure to highlight or help them emerge these ideas based on what they share from the graph.

Although some students may use the language of something like:

“It goes down by 3 every time.”

Be sure to explicitly share how we might see this relationship in the graph. For example, noting that after 4 days, the number of acorns decreased by 20 acorns is an equivalent ratio to after 2 days, the number of acorns decreased by 10 acorns.

-20 acorns to 4 days
-10 acorns to 2 days
-5 acorns to 1 day

These equivalent ratios can be used to reveal a rate through partitive division. In this case, the rate would be -5 acorns per day.

By extending the pattern backwards to day 0, we can reveal the initial value (y-intercept) and highlight a pattern rule of:

Starts with 60 acorns, removing 5 acorns each day

Or, as algebraic expressions such as:

60 – 5d
-5d + 60
-5x + 60

Or, algebraic equations such as:

N = 60 – 5d
N = -5d + 60
y = -5x + 60

Visual Math Talk Prompt #2

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Visual Math Talk Prompt #3

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Purposeful Practice

While Students Are Practicing…

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Questions: Growing Linear Patterns

Question #1:

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Question #2:

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Question #3:

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Question #4:

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Question #5:

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Question #6:

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Resources & Downloads

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Educator Discussion Area

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