His lesson started off with a minds-on activity where the students had to talk about how they would go about adding three numbers together. He did a think-pair-share activity where the students had to tell their partner how they would add the numbers together. To help tie in a little more accountable talk, the students were then asked to share what their partners' strategy for solving the equation was. "John" was asked why it was okay for his partner to move the 3 around in the addition sentence. He told the class that because it is addition, it doesn't matter what order you add them in. This thinking was recorded on the board to help with the upcoming problem. Here are some of their strategies:
The students were given the following problem for their action part of the lesson:
I went to the store and bought some stickers. One pack had 14 stickers, one had 7 stickers and the last pack had 16 stickers. Did I buy enough to give everyone in the class a sticker?
Working in pairs, the students quickly went to work adding the number together using different strategies. What was interesting is that most of the students were successful in solving the problem, but didn't actually answer the question with a final sentence. For some students they realized that the number they got was different than the number of students in the class, (the number of stickers purchased was higher than the number in the class) and they said that he didn't buy enough. This was talked about with the whole class during the consolidation of the lesson.
For consolidation, the student's work was grouped together in a bansho to highlight the strategies that they used. In total, the class showed 5 different ways of adding.
Pictures, Tally Marks and Tally Marks in groups of 10 (this was highlighted to get the students to think about groups of rather than just making groups of 5) |
Adding by 1s and 10s is the "traditional" was of adding, and the final way was Using friendly numbers |
For the group that used friendly numbers, they were prompted by the teacher in helping to explain their thinking. Orally they were able to communicate what they had done, but were not quite able to record it on paper. So when they became "stuck" the teacher recorded their thinking in pen for them and then they carried on from there.
As an "exit ticket" out of the lesson, the students were asked what strategy they would try next time they did addition. What was great was that the students were keen to say "I used strategy x, and next time I want to try strategy y because..." This shows that they are reflecting on their learning, and hoping to expand their addition tool kit.
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