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Grade 4 Unit 6: Decimal Fractions ( 4 Weeks) Stage 1 – Desired Results Established Goals Unit Description The Mathematical Practices should be evident throughout instruction and connected to the content addressed in this unit. Students should engage in mathematical tasks that provide an opportunity to connect content and practices. Common Core Learning Standards Understand decimal notations for fractions, and compare decimal fractions. 4.NF.5: Express a fraction with denominator 10 as an equivalent fraction with denominator 100, and use this technique to add two fractions with respective denominators 10 and 100. For example, express 3/10 as 30/100, and add 3/10 + 4/100 = 34/100. 4.NF.6: Use decimal notation for fractions with denominators 10 or 100. For example, rewrite 0.62 as 62/100; describe a length as 0.62 meters; locate 0.62 on a number line diagram. 4.NF.7: Compare two decimals to hundredths by reasoning about their size. Recognize that comparisons are valid only when the two decimals refer to the same whole. Record the results of comparisons with the symbols >, =, or <, and justify the conclusions, e.g., by using a visual model. Common Core Standards of Mathematical Practice 1. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. 2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively. 3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others. 4. Model with mathematics. 5. Use appropriate tools strategically. 6. Attend to precision. 7. Look for and make use of structure. 8. Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning. ESL Language Standards Standard 1: Students will listen, speak, read, and write in English for information and understanding. 1.1. Identify and use reading and listening strategies to make text comprehensible and meaningful. 1.3 Select information appropriate to the purpose of the investigation, relate ideas from one written or spoken source to another, and exclude nonessential information. 1.5 Formulate, ask, and respond to various question forms to obtain, clarify, and extend information and meaning. 1.7 Present information clearly in a variety of oral and written forms for different audiences and purposes related to all academic content areas. 1.9 Convey and organize information, using facts, details, illustrative examples, and a variety of patterns and structures. 1.16 Apply learning strategies to acquire information and make texts comprehensible and meaningful. Big Ideas 1. Rational numbers can be named in an infinite number of different but equivalent forms. Essential Questions 1. How are decimals and fractions related? 2. The effects of addition with fractions and decimals are the same as those with whole numbers. 2. When you compare two decimals, how can you determine which one has the greater value? Content (Students will know….) A. Understand that 100 is 10 times larger than 10 (e.g., 4 x 1 = 4; 4 x 10 = 40; 4 x 100 = 400). (4.NF.5) Skills (Students will be able to…) A1. Rewrite fractions with denominators of 10 as equivalent with denominators of 100. A2. Add rewritten fractions with denominators of 100 A3. Model addition of fractions with base-ten denominators (10, 100) using base ten models A4. Represent decimal numbers on different models such as tenths and hundredths grids, number lines and tenths and hundredths circles. B. Decimals are special types of fractions that can be written with a denominator that is equal to 10 or 100 (4.NF.6) B1. Read and write decimals to the hundredths place B2. Rewrite fractions with a denominator of 10 or 100 and vice versa (for example: .62 = 62/100) B3. Locate decimal numbers on a number line diagram C. Decimal values can only be compared when they refer to the same whole. (4.NF.7) C1. Compare two decimal values (to hundredths) with the symbols >, =, or <. C2. Record the comparison of two decimal values by using a visual model, e.g., grid drawing, base ten blocks, pictures, tile C3. Justify the result of a comparison of two decimal values by using a visual model. D. Two decimal values can be written differently but still be equivalent (0.1 = 0.10). (4.NF.7) D1. Decompose decimal numbers (.62=.60+.02) D2. Rewrite and recognize equivalent decimals. Terms/ Vocabulary base-ten fractions, common denominator, equivalent fraction, tenths, hundredths, expanded form, decimal, equivalent fraction, decompose, equivalent, <,>, = Stage 2 – Assessment Evidence Other Evidence Teacher observation, conferencing, teacher designed assessment pieces, student work, exit slips, journal entries Initial Task: Playground Plans Final Performance Task: Hallway Duty Stage 3 – Learning Plan Everyday Mathematics/Impact Mathematics Lessons – The following lessons may support some of the CCLS & essential questions outlined in this unit map: 4.NF.5 7.8, 7.9, 9.2, 9.6, 10.1 4.NF.6 4.2, 4.7, 7.8, 8.1, 9.1, 9.2, 9.3, 9.5, 10.6, 12.1 4.NF.7 4.3, 4.4, 4.7, 4.9 Additional Resources: https://www.georgiastandards.org/CommonCore/Common%20Core%20Frameworks/CCGPS_Math_4_Unit5FrameworkS E.pdf http://commoncore.greenwich.wikispaces.net/Math+Resources http://www.uen.org/commoncore/ Name: ______________________ Date: _____________ Grade 4 Unit 6 Initial Performance Task: Playground Plans Below are two floor plans of a new playground they are planning to build at PS 129. 1. The designers plan to cover 4/10 of the playground with square foam tiles for the swing set area. Help the designers by shading 4/10 of the playground on both Plan A and Plan B: Plan A Plan B 2. Rewrite 4/10 as a decimal number. Show how you arrived at your answer: 3. The designers also plan on covering 35/100 of the playground in square foam tiles for the jungle gym. Which part of the playground is covered with more square tiles: the swing set or the jungle gym? Prove your answer using numbers and one of the models below. Prove with numbers: Prove with a model: Playground Jungle Gym 4. Write an expression comparing the area of the swing set to the area of the jungle gym using <, >, or = _______________________________________ 5. What is the TOTAL area of the playground that is covered by the swing set and the jungle gym? Show your math thinking using a model and numbers: Grade 4 Unit 6 Initial Task Scoring Guide Playground Plan Scoring Guide 1. (4.NF.5) Student correctly shades in 4/10 of Plan A and 40/100 of Plan B. Please note: there is a variety of ways to shade in that are correct. 2. (4.NF.6) Student correctly expresses 4/10 as .4 or .40 and shows how they arrived at answer. Such as 4/10 = 40/100 = .40 or references the model and shows equal area in both the tenths and hundredths grids. 3. (4.NF.7) Student uses numbers to prove that the area for the playground is greater than the area for the jungle gym. For example: 4/10 = 40/100. 40/100 is greater than 35/100. Student uses any of the three provided models to prove their answer. 4. (4.NF.7) Student writes any of the acceptable expressions such as: .40 > .35 4/10 > 3.5/10 40/100 > 35/100 .35 < .40 3.5/10 < 4/10 35/100 < 40/100 5. (4.NF.5) Student correctly shows that the total area is .35 + .40 = .75 with numbers Student correctly shows that the total area is .75 using any model Total Points Novice 0 - 3 points Points Section Points 1 1 2 2 2 2 4 2 1 1 1 3 2 12 Apprentice Practitioner Expert 4 - 7 points 8 - 11 points 12 points 12 Name: __________________________ Date: _____________ Grade 4 Unit 6 Final Performance Task: Hallway Duty Ms. Collins, the principal at PS 226 has asked teachers to monitor certain sections of the hallways during dismissal. Below is a floor plan of the hallways at PS 226. 1) Color in the section of the school that each teacher could have been asked to take care of. Teacher Mrs. Darling Mrs. Woodley Mr. Hunter Mr. Bailey Ms. Baker Section Size 2/10 1/2 .15 .10 5/100 Color to shade Green Red Yellow Orange Blue 2) Who covered more of the hallway: Mrs. Darling or Mr. Hunter? 3) Use any model and/or numbers to prove which teacher covered more of the hallway 4) Write an expression using <, >, or = comparing Mrs. Darling’s section to Mr. Hunter’s section using decimal numbers ________________________________________ 5) Mrs. Woodley says that the sections are not fair. She claims that her section is bigger than everyone else’s sections combined! Is she right? Use any model and numbers to illustrate your thinking. Grade 4 Unit 6 Hallway Duty Scoring Guide Hallway Scoring Guide Points Section Points 1. (4.NF.5) a. Student correctly shades 2/10 of the floor plan (or 20 squares) b. Student correctly shades ½ of the floor plan (or 50 squares). c. Student correctly shades .15 of the floor plan (or 15 squares). d. Student correctly shades 1/10 of the floor plan (or 10 squares). e. Student correctly shades 5/100 of the floor plan (or 5 squares) 1 1 1 1 1 5 2. (4.NF.7) Student correctly states that Mrs. Darling covered more of the hallway 1 1 2 4 3. (4.NF.7) Student correctly uses any model such as a number line, hundredths circle or hundredths grid to prove that Mrs. Darling covers 20/100 while Mr. Hunter only covers 15/100 2 Student also uses numbers to prove that Mrs. Darling covers more area by converting 2/10 to 20/100 and .15 to 15/100 or another such viable method. 4. (4.NF.6, 4.NF.7) Student writes a correct expression (with decimals) such as: .15 < .20 .2 > .15 1 1 5. (4.NF.5, 4.NF.7) Student correctly states that Mrs. Woodley’s one section is equal to all 1 of the other sections combined, not more than. 6 Student proves, using any model (can count the number of shaded squares) that Mrs. Woodley’s section = all the other sections combined Student uses math to show the addition of the other 4 sections by converting all section sizes into a common denominator such as 100. Then, shows how it is equal to Mrs. Woodley’s section. Total Points 2 3 17 17 Novice Apprentice Practitioner Expert 0-4 points 5 - 9 points 10- 14 points 15-17 points