Multiple Groups Problems Meeting Developed by Joe Bysiek with collaboration of Crown Point teachers
First Thought It came up what about the student who can’t “break things” into equal sized pieces. Students need to be able to decompose and recompose whole numbers first.
For Example: Where would 6 fall on this number line? Can a student complete the task accurately WITHOUT making all the marks?
Can you Explain?
Fifth Grade problem
Multiplying and Dividing Fractions Grade 6 Meets the 3s and the 2s
Multiplying and Dividing Fractions Grade 5 Fits all the 3s Fits all the 2s
Adding and Subtracting Fractions Grade 5 Score 3 Solve word problems involving the addition and subtraction of fractions referring to the same whole, including cases of unlike denominators Any of the scores 2
Adding and Subtracting Fractions Grade 5 Score 3: Solve word problems involving the addition and subtraction of fractions referring to the same whole.
4 th grade Problem A teacher wants to give 8 students 1 ¼ candy bars. How many candy bars does she need?
4 th Grade Multiplying and Dividing Hits all portions
4 th Grade Fractions Does not meet
Adding and Subtracting Fractions Hits all score 3s except Add fractions with denominators 10 and 100..
3 rd Grade Problem There are 4 sandwiches for 6 children to share. How many sandwiches does each child get?
Fractions Score 3: Express whole numbers as fractions
Foundations of Fractions
What I learned (Thank you!) The importance of the numerator and denominator Why with a mixed number we divide by the denominator Why when we divide we multiply by the reciprocal
What I hope you take from this There is more than one way to solve a problem A deeper understanding of fractions How fractions build from grade level to grade level A better understanding of what a 3 looks like on a Marzano scale