HOW MANY COOKIES? HOW MANY CRACKERS? [DAY 5]
ADDING AND SUBTRACTING WITHIN 100
Introduction to using place value strategies to add and subtract within 100
Intentionality
Spark Curiosity
Fuel Sensemaking
During Moves
Student Approaches
Next Moves
Consolidation
Reflect and Consolidation Prompts
Resources & Downloads
Educator Discussion Area
Intentionality & Unit Overview
Length of Unit: 6 Days
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Students will determine how many cookies remain in the box of 54 crackers after a handful are removed.
Intentionality…
Students will determine how many cookies remain in the box after two handfuls are removed.
In this task, students will determine how many cookies remain in the box of 100 cookies after two handfuls are removed.
Some of the big ideas that may emerge through this task include:
- The action of removal is represented by subtraction.
- Removal problems can be solved by addition or subtraction.
- Unitizing 10 single cookies into one group of 10 cookies.
- When adding two digit numbers, regrouping 11 – 19 single cookies in the partial sum into a group of 10 and some leftover singles.
- Addition and subtraction problems within 100 can be solved using strategies along a developmental continuum of counting all, counting on/back, and using place value strategies.
- When students are using place value strategies to solve addition and subtraction problems within 100, they are using their understanding of tens and ones and decomposition to accurately, flexibly, and efficiently solve problems. See the Student Approaches section in this guide for examples.
- Strategies for solving two step addition and subtraction problems.
Before starting this unit, students should be familiar with:
- Fluency within 10.
- Solving Result Unknown Take From story problems (eg: 27 – 5 = ?)
- Difference Unknown Comparison story problems. (eg: 25 – ? = 7)
- Understanding subtraction as an unknown-addend problem (eg: 7 + ? = 25)
- Understanding that the two digits of a two-digit number represent amounts of tens and ones. (in 25, the 2 has a value of 20 and the 5 has a value of 5)
- Composing and decomposing two digit numbers. (25 can be decomposed into 20 and 5 or into 15 and 10)
- Adding within 100, including adding a two-digit number and a one-digit number.
Spark Curiosity
What Do You Notice? What Do You Wonder?
Show students this video:
Then, ask students:
What do you notice?
What do you wonder?
Give students 60 seconds (or more) to do a rapid write on a piece of paper or silent individual think time.
Replaying the video can be helpful here if appropriate.
Then, ask students to pair share with their neighbours for another 60 seconds.
Finally, allow students to individually share with the entire group. Be sure to record these noticings and wonderings on the blackboard/whiteboard, chart paper, or some other way that is visible to all. This helps students to see the thinking of their classmates and ensures each student that their voice is acknowledged and appreciated. Adding student names or initials next to their notice/wonder is one way to acknowledge their participation and can motivate others to join in.
Some noticings and wonderings that may come up:
- I noticed that same box of Biscoff cookies from the other day.
- I noticed the box was unopened again at the beginning of the video.
- I noticed that two people took cookies out of the box. Each person took a handful.
- I noticed that there were less cookies in the box after the person took some out because the level of cookies was lower.
- I wonder how many cookies were taken out of the box by each person.
- I wonder how many they took out all together.
- I wonder how many cookies were left in the box after the first handful was taken out.
- I wonder how many cookies were left in the box at the end of the video.
- I wonder how many cookies were in the box before it was opened.
- I wonder if we will get to eat some Biscoff cookies.
- And many more.
At this point, you can answer any noticings and wonderings that you can cross off the list right away. Things like “I wonder whether we will get to eat some Biscoff cookies?” can be addressed right away to show students that we are indeed listening to their contributions and that we value student voice.
Estimation: Prompt
After we have heard students and demonstrated that we value their voice, we can land on today’s question. Acknowledging that the question came from students underscores their identities as thinking mathematicians and Math Practice 1, Making Sense of Problems.
How many crackers are left in the box?
Follow up that question with:
How could you convince someone that the quantity you come up with is correct?
We can now ask students to make an estimate (not a guess) as we want them to be as strategic as they can possibly be. This will force them to use spatial reasoning comparing the amount of cookies in the box at the beginning and end of the video or possibly some estimation based on the cookies in the top layer. They may also build on their experience from Day 1. At this point in the unit, they know a lot more about the quantities involved in the box and in handfuls.
Before collecting student estimates, students can share their estimates in small groups along with a justification for the reasonableness of their prediction.
Consider asking students to think about a number that would be “too low” and a number that would be “too high” before asking for their best estimate in order to help them come up with a more reasonable estimate.
While Students Are Estimating…
Monitor student thinking by circulating around the room and listening to the mathematical discourse. You may identify some students whose thinking would be valuable to share when the group’s estimates are collected.
Encourage students to use precise mathematical language (including greater than, less than, more, less, half, higher than, lower than, layer, combine, join) to articulate their defense of their estimate.
Similar to collecting their noticings and wonderings, collect students’ range of estimates and/or best estimates along with initials or names. Having some students share justifications is an opportunity for rich, mathematical discourse.
At the end of this task, during The Reveal, revisit the estimates to see how accurate students were and to reflect on the justifications they made.
Fuel Sense-making
Crafting A Productive Struggle: Prompt
Since we’ve already invested time to set the context for this problem and student curiosity is already sparked, we have them in a perfect spot to help push their thinking further and fuel sense making.
Ask the students what information they will need and how they will use it in order to find out how many cookies remain in the box. Here we are asking students to envision a solution path. By considering what information will be needed and how it can be used to solve the problem, students are being asked to make sense of the problem and reason abstractly and quantitatively (Math Practices 1 and 2). By not simply providing this information, we are inducing students to engage more deeply with the problem and think about all of its parts, known and unknown, before they begin crunching the numbers.
During Moves
While Students Are Productively Struggling…
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Student Approaches
Student Approach #1: Counting All with a To
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Student Approach #2: An Open Number Line Diagram for Counting Back/Up by Ones
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Student Approach #3: Base 10 Block Drawing to Represent Place Value Thinking
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Student Approach #4: An Open Number Line Diagram to Show Place Value Strategies for Taking Away
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Student Approach #5: Base 10 Block Drawing to Represent Place Value Thinking
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Student Approach #6: An Open Number Line Diagram to Show Place Value Strategies for Addition and for Taking Away
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Student Approach #7: A Bar Model Diagram with equations
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Next Moves
Consolidation
Consolidation: Making Connections During Classroom Discourse
Consolidate learning by facilitating a student discussion.
Students present their work one by one or group by group according to the sequence that the teacher determined during the Sense Making portion of the lesson. During student presentations, the teacher can promote discussion by facilitating commenting and question asking between classmates. The twin goals of discussion are to get students to engage one another and to generalize that place value strategies are an effective strategy for adding and subtracting within 100.
To promote student engagement and facilitate discussion, teachers can:
- Create a psychologically safe space to promote intellectual risk taking, new ideas, and broader participation during discussions,
- Provide guided practice in advance regarding how to present work, appropriate voice volume, how to listen, how to agree/disagree respectfully, and other behaviors and practices to promote discussion.
- Make student work easily visible by using a document camera or other tool so that the image is large enough or all students to clearly see. so that the image is large.
- When an important point is made by a student, prompt other students to repeat/rephrase it. This encourages listening to one another and allows for an important point to be stated 2-3 times so that more people can hear it.
- Instead of answering questions asked by students, redirecting the question back to the class. This promotes student to student dialogue.
- While it is important to keep the consolidation purpose in mind, also being open to other important thoughts and ideas that arise. Honoring these rich insights builds excitement and students’ vision of themselves as mathematicians making discoveries.
To promote greater understanding of place value strategies, teachers can familiarize themselves with the following Place Value Strategies. As students explain their thinking during the class discussion, listen for and highlight their explanations and representations that demonstrate place value strategies.
Look for and highlight examples of students using their understanding of tens and ones to help them flexibly solve the problem in a way that is efficient and accurate. This will resemble the work samples in Student Approaches 3, 4, or 5. In these approaches, students are decomposing the amount being taken away into tens and ones. Students can show this understanding using Base 10 block drawings, open number lines, or just equations.
It is not necessary for students in your class to use each and every one of these approaches. Rather, utilize the examples that your students come up with as the examples of place value thinking that can be discussed by the whole group. By guiding the discussion in this direction with classroom based examples, teachers will help their class to construct their own understandings of adding and subtracting using place value strategies.
- Adding or Subtracting One Number in Parts (see Student Approach #4 for diagram)
- Students who use this strategy for 100-19 will break the 19 into two parts by place, 10 and 9. Then they will subtract each part separately. Typically, students will first subtract the tens place number (100 – 10 = 90). Then they will subtract the ones place number (90 – 9 = 81). It is acceptable to subtract the ones first (100 – 9 = 91 and 91-10 = 81). They will solve the second part of the problem 81 – 16 = ? in a similar way. First subtracting the tens (81 – 10 = 71) and then the ones. In this case, they may decompose the 6 ones into 5 ones and 1 one. Ts will allow them to stop at the benchmark number. First, they subtract 1 one (71 – 1 = 70) and then the 5 ones (70 – 5 = 65).
Some students may apply the subtracting one number in parts strategy after adding together the handfuls of 16 and 19 cookies. These students will be solving 100 – 35 = ? After decomposing the 35 into 30 and 5, these students will subtract the 3 tens (100 – 30 = 70) and then the 5 ones (70 – 5 = 65). See Student Approach #6 for diagram)
- Students who use this strategy for 100-19 will break the 19 into two parts by place, 10 and 9. Then they will subtract each part separately. Typically, students will first subtract the tens place number (100 – 10 = 90). Then they will subtract the ones place number (90 – 9 = 81). It is acceptable to subtract the ones first (100 – 9 = 91 and 91-10 = 81). They will solve the second part of the problem 81 – 16 = ? in a similar way. First subtracting the tens (81 – 10 = 71) and then the ones. In this case, they may decompose the 6 ones into 5 ones and 1 one. Ts will allow them to stop at the benchmark number. First, they subtract 1 one (71 – 1 = 70) and then the 5 ones (70 – 5 = 65).
- Adding Up (see Student Approach #6 for diagram)
- Some students may be aware of the inverse relationship of addition and subtraction. These students know that if 10 – 3 = ?, then 3 = ? = 10. These students may find it easier to add up than subtract back. To solve 100 – 35 = ?, then rewrite it as 35 + ? = 100. They will then use their understanding of place value to add on tens and ones separately. Here are two ways students might add up.
- Ask questions such as,
- How did this student take away 19 from 100?
- Why did this student first take away 10 and then take away 9. Why not just take it all away at once? Why not just take away 19 ones?
- How did this student take away 16 from 81? Why did they break up the sixteen into 1, 10, and 5?
- Why did the student thicken the ten stick and show the 10 ones in it?
- What is happening when a student trades a ten stick for 10 singles?
- How did the student make the problem easier by showing 100 as 10 sticks of ten?
- Why did the student add the 19 and 16 first?
- How did this student use their understanding of place to solve the problem?
Have students present their strategies and reasoning for how to represent the number of cookies remaining in the box. Ask them to convince you and their classmates that their answer is correct by sharing their mathematical model. It can be very effective to project the student work with a document camera or project a photo of the student work from your computer so that everyone can easily see what the presenting student is referring to. When the other students can easily see the work sample, they remain more engaged and understand more deeply.
Discuss student strategies and elicit the questions and comments of other students during your consolidation. The goal is to help them to build off of their current prior knowledge and understanding. We want students to be socially constructing their understanding in a way that makes sense for them.
- Here you are listening to this discourse with an ear for what is important for your students’ emerging understanding and application of place value strategies for addition and subtraction problems.
Reflect and Consolidation Prompts
After the reveal, check back to your estimations. The purpose here is to reflect on student reasoning, not on celebrating who was closest.
Were there some estimates in the right neighborhood? What helped those students to get close? How did they think about it?
Without a lot of information, mathematicians have to make assumptions all of the time. What assumptions made some estimates way too low or way too high?
Now that we have figured out how many cookies were left in the box, what new questions does this raise in your mind? You may choose to explore one or more of these student generated questions on another day or as homework.
Provide students an opportunity to reflect on their learning by offering these consolidation prompts to be completed independently.
Consolidation Prompt #1:
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Consolidation Prompt #2:
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Consolidation Prompt #3:
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Consolidation Prompt #4:
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We suggest collecting this reflection as an additional opportunity to engage in the formative assessment process to inform next steps for individual students as well as how the whole class will proceed.
Resources & Downloads
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Videos, Images & Media Files
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Powerpoint Presentation
Printable Consolidation Prompts
Educator Discussion Area
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