This is a task from the Illustrative Mathematics website that is one …
This is a task from the Illustrative Mathematics website that is one part of a complete illustration of the standard to which it is aligned. Each task has at least one solution and some commentary that addresses important asects of the task and its potential use. Here are the first few lines of the commentary for this task: Materials The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle The students work individually or in pairs. Each student or pair needs: Three ten-frames for each s...
Materials: large variety of dice (dot dice, numeral dice, polyhedron dice, etc.); paper for …
Materials: large variety of dice (dot dice, numeral dice, polyhedron dice, etc.); paper for recording addition equations; pencils How to play: Students divide into partners of similar skill level and choose appropriate dice for their skill level. Each student will need two dice. Each student wil roll both dice and announce the sum of their two numbers. The winner of each round is the student with the largest sum. If students have the same sum, then a tie is declared for that round. The winning student records his/her addition equation on the notepad. For example, Tom and Sue both roll their two dice. Tom rolls 4 and 2. Sue rolls 6 and 5. Therefore, Sue states and records 6+5=11 on the paper for winning the round. **Game can be modified to find the difference between two numbers rather than the sum. Photo Credit: James Bowe https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/
In this first module of Grade 1, students make significant progress towards …
In this first module of Grade 1, students make significant progress towards fluency with addition and subtraction of numbers to 10 as they are presented with opportunities intended to advance them from counting all to counting on which leads many students then to decomposing and composing addends and total amounts.
Find the rest of the EngageNY Mathematics resources at https://archive.org/details/engageny-mathematics.
Dominoes have become a staple in most primary classrooms. They build upon …
Dominoes have become a staple in most primary classrooms. They build upon dice patterns and are often used to model decomposition of numbers, building student knowledge of addition facts. They are an excellent manipulative for primary students to use and these are some examples of how students might use dominoes in the math center. Try these domino games with students to improve math skills and number recognition. Encourage students to play these games at home with their families, using real dominoes or paper copies.
(Nota: Esta es una traducción de un recurso educativo abierto creado por …
(Nota: Esta es una traducción de un recurso educativo abierto creado por el Departamento de Educación del Estado de Nueva York (NYSED) como parte del proyecto "EngageNY" en 2013. Aunque el recurso real fue traducido por personas, la siguiente descripción se tradujo del inglés original usando Google Translate para ayudar a los usuarios potenciales a decidir si se adapta a sus necesidades y puede contener errores gramaticales o lingüísticos. La descripción original en inglés también se proporciona a continuación.)
En este primer módulo de Grado 1, los estudiantes avanzan significativamente hacia la fluidez con la adición y la resta de los números a 10, ya que se les presenta oportunidades destinadas a avanzar de contar todos a contar con el que lleva a muchos estudiantes a descomponerse y componer los sujetos y el total cantidades.
Encuentre el resto de los recursos matemáticos de Engageny en https://archive.org/details/engageny-mathematics.
English Description: In this first module of Grade 1, students make significant progress towards fluency with addition and subtraction of numbers to 10 as they are presented with opportunities intended to advance them from counting all to counting on which leads many students then to decomposing and composing addends and total amounts.
Find the rest of the EngageNY Mathematics resources at https://archive.org/details/engageny-mathematics.
The intent of clarifying statements is to provide additional guidance for educators …
The intent of clarifying statements is to provide additional guidance for educators to communicate the intent of the standard to support the future development of curricular resources and assessments aligned to the 2021 math standards. Clarifying statements can be in the form of succinct sentences or paragraphs that attend to one of four types of clarifications: (1) Student Experiences; (2) Examples; (3) Boundaries; and (4) Connection to Math Practices.
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