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Episode 3 Supports

  • Exploring: The students consider a proportional reasoning problem by first anticipating how many groups of a one car’s journey fit into another car’s journey.

  • For use in a classroom, pause the video and ask these questions:

     

    1. [Pause video at 0:58] Kate said, "There is 10 in both of them." Ten what? The teacher said, "How many groups?" Groups of what?

    2. [Pause video at 1:51] What are the units for each number in the two equations?

  • When engaging in the tasks in class, invite your students to attend the quantities in a problem by asking them:

     

    • In this problem, 4 is a number that enumerates a quantity, the time it takes for the blue car to finish a 10-mile journey. Work with your neighbor to make a list of all the different quantities in this problem.

    • Ask students to share a quantity that they noticed. Ask who else has this quantity on their list. Ask if a student has another different quantity to add to the class list. Continue this process until there are no more new student contributions.

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Mathematics in this Lesson

Lesson Description

 

Kate and Christopher make connections between their speed diagrams and the operations of multiplication and division.  This helps give meaning to number sentences used to solve proportion problems.