The focus of this session is on the complexities of counting and on the work students do in Investigations around making sense of our base-ten number system and the place value of numbers.
In this session you will:
Materials: Hundredths Grids
Counting is the basis for understanding our number system and for much of the number work in the primary grades...While it may seem simple, counting is actually quite complex and involved.”
The readings above are all published in Investigations in Number, Data, and Space®, Third Edition. Glenview: Pearson, 2017.
In this activity, you will look at aspects of counting, analyze counting scenarios and consider what students understand and do not yet understand about counting.
Working Agreement and Classroom Promises
Watch as a group of kindergarteners determine the next number in the book their teacher is reading to them, Anno’s Counting Book.
Record your responses to the following in your notebook.
Use what you read in Counting is More Than 1, 2, 3 to identify and reflect on the aspects of counting that students engage in and what they seem to understand about counting in the following:
Observing students as they count can give you information about what they understand about counting a set of objects and what they have not yet figured out. This information can be difficult to obtain from only looking at what a student records on paper.
For each of the three scenarios listed in the Counting Scenarios Forum, share the following information:
Note:
Each of the scenarios gives only a little information about the student. If these were students in your classroom you would, of course, have a lot more information about the students based on your prior observations. For this activity, please use only the information in the scenarios to discuss what the student might understand and not yet understand.
In this activity, you will analyze written counting sequence errors; determine where numbers belong on a 1,000-chart based on the structure of our base-ten number system; and think about the place value of a specific number.
Throughout Investigations students have many opportunities to work on learning both the oral and written number sequence and the structure of the number system.
In first grade and then at the beginning of second grade, students do an activity called Counting Strips. They start at zero and write the numbers vertically in sequence, as high as they can, on a strip of adding machine tape.
Teachers can learn how high their students can count and what students understand and don’t yet understand about the written number sequence as they watch their students create counting strips.
Observing students as they engage in activities and conversations about their ideas is a primary means of assessing students’ learning. Such formative opportunities are built into every Investigations session. One feature is the Ongoing Assessment: Observing Students at Work – which offers questions to consider as teachers observe students solving problems, playing math games and working on activities.
Use the Observing Students at Work questions below to help you analyze the mistakes in the following counting strips.
Click on [show] to see parts of three strips that illustrate common errors first grade students make as they make the counting strips.
Look at each counting strip and consider:
After first grade students have created their own counting strips, the teacher creates a horizontal counting strip of the numbers 1 to 100. The class then cuts the counting strip into rows of 10 and creates a 100 Chart.
A 100 Chart is a tool that is used throughout the grades to learn about the number system and to work on addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. In later grades students use multiple 100 charts to examine the structure of 1,000 and 10,000.
Third grade students create a 1,000 chart using ten blank 100 charts. Students fill in enough numbers on each 100 chart so they can locate any number. Then they find specific numbers and record them on their 1,000 chart.
Use the 1,000 Book to find the numbers in the in spaces marked by letters A-E.
Record your responses to the following in your notebook.
Understanding the place value structure of our base-ten number system is central to the work students do with numbers and to their ability to efficiently and flexibly solve computation problems. That involves knowing the values of the digits in a number (e.g. in 235, the 2 represents two hundreds, the 3 represents three tens and the 5 represents 5 ones), but there is much more students need to understand about place value of numbers and abut the base-ten number system.
Click [show] to see student responses to the question, ‘How many 10?’.
When a class of third grade students was asked how many tens there are in 163, their responses included 6, 60 and 16.
What do you think each student understands or does not yet understand about how many 10s there are in the number 163?
In this activity, you will read and reflect on the different aspects of place value and the number system that students work on; engage in activities that highlight the place value of numbers; and examine the base-ten number system from whole numbers to decimals.
The following readings focus on the different aspects of place value that students work on throughout Investigations. Choose at least 3 grade levels to read.
Place Value readings by grade level:
Record your responses to the following in your notebook.
Much of the foundation for work with place value is laid in the early grades. Students engage in activities that highlight the importance of 10 in our number system. One important idea that students are working on in Kindergarten and first grade is that ten ones can also be thought of as one group of ten. This idea is highlighted in many of the activities, particularly when they do activities that involve working with sticks of 10 connecting cubes and when they work with Ten Frames.
A Ten Frame is an important model that students in Kindergarten and first grade use for counting, and addition and subtraction which reinforces the idea that ten ones can also be thought of as a group of ten ones or one ten.
Each session in the Investigations curriculum units includes sidebars which are a small form of professional development. These sidebars include Math Notes, Teaching Notes and Math Practice Notes. Math Notes highlight and briefly discuss a mathematical idea that is important in that session.
The games included in Investigations are a central part of the mathematics, not just enrichment activities. Games provide engaging opportunities for students to have repeated practice with important mathematical concepts and skills and to develop and deepen their mathematical understanding and reasoning.
Play a few rounds of the following games:
First and second-grade students move from working just with ones to working with groups of tens and ones using a few different models. This work helps them identify how numbers are composed and ways they can be broken into tens and ones. These models help students understanding of how two-digit numbers are written: the first digit represents the number of groups of 10 and the second digit designates the number of ones.
Math Words and Ideas is a digital resource that provides an overview of a grade level’s year of mathematical work, a closer look at the ideas and the kinds of problems students encounter and examples of students’ solutions. This component is designed to be used flexibly- as a resource for students to review concepts during class after they have been introduced, as a reference while doing homework, and/or as a reference for families to better understand the work their children are doing in class. It is not meant to be used to teach students new concepts, skills or strategies. In this course. we will use this resource as one means to share how students work on specific concepts in Investigations.
Watch the following Math Words and Ideas, Tens and Ones, which shows the different models first graders use to think about tens and ones and the important ideas about tens and ones they are working on.
Math Words and Ideas, Tens and Ones
Second grade students are introduced to a context, a store called Sticker Station, that sells stickers individually (as singles, or ones), in strips of ten or in sheets of 100.
This context helps students think about place value, the principle upon which numbers in our base-ten number system are structured.
Solve the following second grade problem. You may want to record your work.
Imagine you wanted to buy 46 stickers from the Sticker Station.
What are all the different combinations of strips and singles you can buy to make 46 stickers? (you don’t have to include strips and singles in each of your combinations).
When students work with decimal numbers in fourth and fifth grade they learn how our number system extends to include numbers between whole numbers and how the place value structure continues.
Print out the Hundredths Grids. Have one grid of 100 squares equal one whole and use the grids to show 3, 0.3 .03 and 0.003.
Read Extending Place Value to Tenths, Hundreths
Record your responses to the following in your notebook.
Describe what you learned about the complexities of counting, making sense of place value and our base-ten number system in this session.
Cite specific examples of ways students work on these ideas in Investigations.
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