Addition and Subtraction of Fractions Part 1 Class 7 June 28, 2011 Common Core Leadership in...
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Transcript of Addition and Subtraction of Fractions Part 1 Class 7 June 28, 2011 Common Core Leadership in...
Addition and Subtraction of Fractions Part 1
Class 7
June 28, 2011
Common Core Leadership in Mathematics Project University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2011
Common Core Leadership in Mathematics Project, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2011
Learning Intentions
We are learning to Develop “operation sense” related to adding and subtracting
fractions. Understand how estimation should be an integral part of fraction
computation development. Read and interpret the cluster of CCSS standards related to
addition/subtraction of fractions
We will know we are successful when we can Justify our thinking when adding and subtracting fractions using
concrete models and estimation strategies. Clearly explain and provide examples for specific CCSS standards
Common Core Leadership in Mathematics Project, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2011
Big Ideas for Addition and Subtraction of Fractions
Fraction addition and subtraction concepts build from and are dependent upon: Foundational part-to-whole ideas Equivalence ideas Magnitude ideas
Procedural fluency and conceptual understanding work together to deepen student understanding of fraction addition and subtraction.
Common Core Leadership in Mathematics Project, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2011
Launch: Building on What We Know
Use a model to answer this question:
There are some candies in a dish.
2/5 of the candies are chocolate
3/10 of the candies are peppermint
Are there more chocolate or peppermint candies?
Common Core Leadership in Mathematics Project, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2011
Using Estimation
Aunt Sally has a jar that holds one cup of liquid. Her salad dressing recipe calls for 2/3 cup of oil
1/8 cup of vinegar 1/2 cup of juiceIs the jar large enough to hold all the oil,
vinegar and juice?
Common Core Leadership in Mathematics Project, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2011
Exploring Operation Sense Using Benchmark Fractions
Using your fraction strips, work through the following and have several examples for each
If you add 2 fractions and the sum is greater than ½, what can you say about the fractions?
If you add 2 fractions and the sum is greater than 1, what can you say about the fractions?
What conversations did you have with your partner that helped to develop a generalization about these contexts?
Common Core Leadership in Mathematics Project, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2011
Connections to Standard 5.NF.2
1. Read standard 5NF2. Highlighting important words and phrases.
2. In your group, discuss highlighted key ideas in this standard and questions you may have.
3. Work as a group to cite three specific examples of how the previous activity made sense of this standard.
Common Core Leadership in Mathematics Project, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2011
Standards for Mathematical Practice
Common Core Leadership in Mathematics Project, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2011
Success Criteria
We will know we are successful when we canJustify our thinking when adding and subtracting fractions using concrete models and estimation strategies.Clearly explain and provide an example for specific CCSS standards