Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Fourth Grade Mathematics Incorporated Throughout the Year Mathematical Practices 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. Reason abstractly and quantitatively. Construct viable arguments and critique the reason of others. Model with mathematics Use appropriate tools strategically. Attend to precision. Look for and make use of structure. Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning. Grading Period 4 Measurement and Data Represent and interpret data. 3. Make a line plot to display a data set of measurements in fractions of a unit (1/2, 1/4, 1/8). Solve problems involving addition and subtraction of fractions by using information presented in line plots. For example, from a line plot find and interpret the difference in length between the longest and shortest specimens in an insect collection. Geometric measurement: understand concepts of angle and measure angles. 5. Recognize angles as geometric shapes that are formed wherever two rays share a common endpoint, and understand concepts of angle measurement: a. An angle is measured with reference to a circle with its center at the common endpoint of the rays, by considering the fraction of the circular arc between the points where the two rays intersect the circle. An angle that turns through 1/360 of a circle is called a “one-degree angle,” and can be used to measure angles. b. An angle that turns through n one-degree angles is said to have an angle measure of n degrees. 6. Measure angles in whole-number degrees using a protractor. Sketch angles of specified measure. 7. Recognize angle measure as additive. When an angle is decomposed into non-overlapping parts, the angle measure of the whole is the sum of the angle measures of the parts. Solve addition and subtraction problems to find unknown angles on a diagram in real world and mathematical problems, e.g., by using an equation with a symbol for the unknown angle measure. Geometry Draw and identify lines and angles, and classify shapes by properties of their lines and angles. 1. Draw points, lines, line segments, rays, angles (right, acute, obtuse), and perpendicular and parallel lines. Identify these in two-dimensional figures. 2. Classify two-dimensional figures based on the presence or absence of parallel or perpendicular lines, or the presence or absence of angles of a specified size. Recognize right triangles as a category, and identify right triangles. 3. Recognize a line of symmetry for a two-dimensional figure as a line across the figure such that the figure can be folded along the line into matching parts. Identify line-symmetric figures and draw lines of symmetry. Columbus City Schools 2014-2015 What Can I Do At Home? Grade 4 Fourth Grading Period During the second grading period, in math, your child will be expected to: Here’s what you can do to help your child master these skills: Measurement and Data ♦ Make a line plot to display a data set of measurements in fractions of a unit (1/2, 1/4, 1/8). ♦ Solve problems involving addition and subtraction of fractions by using information presented in line plots. ♦ Recognize angles as geometric shapes that formed wherever two rays share a common endpoint and understand concepts of angle measurements. ♦ Use two straws, toothpicks, chopsticks, etc. to form intersecting lines. Have your child identify the types of angles formed (right, acute, obtuse, etc.) ♦ Use a pair of straws and a pair of toothpicks to form identical angles. Ask your child which is the bigger angle. Discuss that the angle size is not affected by the length of the rays. ♦ Ask your child to use two straws, toothpicks, etc. to make “benchmark angles” (90·, 45·, 180·, etc.). ♦ Go on an angle hunt in your neighborhood. Help your child to see angles in a variety of situations. ♦ Understand that each ray determines a direction and the angle size measures the change from one direction to another. ♦ Measure angles in whole-number degrees using a protractor. Sketch angles of specified measure. ♦ Recognize angle measure as additive; decompose an angle measure into non-overlapping parts, the angle measure of the whole is the sum of the angle measures of the parts. ♦ Solve addition and subtraction problems to find unknown angles on a diagram in real world and mathematical problems. Geometry ♦ Draw points, lines, line segments, rays, angles (right, acute, obtuse), and perpendicular and parallel lines. Identify these in two-dimensional figures. ♦ Classify two-dimensional figures based on the parallel or perpendicular lines or specified angle size. ♦ Recognize a line of symmetry for a twodimensional figure as a line across the figure such that the figure can be folded along the line into matching parts. Identify line-symmetric figures and draw lines of symmetry. Columbus City Schools ♦ Draw three lines on a piece of paper. Ask your child to draw a second line with each of yours so that one grouping makes a set of parallel lines, another makes a set of perpendicular lines and finally the third makes a set of intersecting lines. ♦ Play “I Spy a 2-D Shape” with your child. Ask them to use precise vocabulary when they give their clues. For example, “I spy a shape with four right angles, four vertices and two sets of parallel sides.” ♦ Give your child various household objects (e.g., cans, boxes, pencil, drinking glass, etc.). Ask him/her to sort the objects into different categories and explain the sort to you. Ask for the objects to be resorted another way. ♦ Find different objects in your home that have right angles. Then, find other objects that have either larger or smaller angles. Ask your child to sort the objects into different groups according to the size of the angle: right angles, acute angles, or obtuse angles. Also, have your child tell you about the measures of the angles (acute is less than 90 degrees, obtuse is more than 90 degrees, right is equal to 90 degrees) and estimate the measure of each angle. 2012-2013 What Can I Do At Home? Grade 4 Fourth Grading Period Cont. Here’s what you can do to help your child master these skills: ♦ Find items around your home or neighborhood that represent angles (corners), skew (objects hanging from a mobile), parallel (train tracks), and perpendicular (90° intersections). ♦ Compare similar angles using different objects in your house and identifying that the angle is the same measure but the sides or rays that create it can all be different. ♦ Find any object in your home, and determine if it is symmetrical (when folded in half, both halves are mirror images of each other). If the object is symmetrical, identify the lines of symmetry. ♦ Draw a variety of polygons for your child. Ask them to guess how many lines of symmetry each polygon has. Let your child cut out each polygon to fold the shape and check for symmetry. ♦ Search “line plots” on the internet. Discuss the kind of data that is displayed in a line plot. Look at examples and ask your child questions about the line plots you see. ♦ Help your child to measure small objects in your home to the nearest 1/8 of an inch. Work together to create a line plot that displays this information. Ask your child questions like ♦ “How many objects measured 1/8 inch? What would be the total lengths of all of the objects if we laid them end to end?” Columbus City Schools 2012-2013 Mathematics Model Curriculum Grade Level: Fourth Grade Grading Period: 4 Common Core Domain Time Range: 20 Days Measurement and Data Common Core Standards Geometric measurement: understand concepts of angle and measure angles. 5. Recognize angles as geometric shapes that are formed wherever two rays share a common endpoint, and understand concepts of angle measurement: a. An angle is measured with reference to a circle with its center at the common endpoint of the rays, by considering the fraction of the circular arc between the points where the two rays intersect the circle. An angle that turns through 1/360 of a circle is called a “one-degree angle,” and can be used to measure angles. b. An angle that turns through n one-degree angles is said to have an angle measure of ndegrees. 6. Measure angles in whole-number degrees using a protractor. Sketch angles of specified measure. 7. Recognize angle measure as additive. When an angle is decomposed into non-overlapping parts, the angle measure of the whole is the sum of the angle measures of the parts. Solve addition and subtraction problems to find unknown angles on a diagram in real world and mathematical problems, e.g., by using an equation with a symbol for the unknown angle measure. The description from the Common Core Standards Critical Area of Focus for Grade 4 says: Students describe, analyze, compare, and classify two-dimensional shapes. Through building, drawing, and analyzing two-dimensional shapes, students deepen their understanding of properties of two-dimensional objects and the use of them to solve problems involving symmetry. Content Elaborations This section will address the depth of the standards that are being taught. from ODE Model Curriculum Ohio has chosen to support shared interpretation of the standards by linking the work of multistate partnerships as the Mathematics Content Elaborations. Further clarification of the standards can be found through these reliable organizations and their links: Achieve the Core Modules, Resources Hunt Institute Video examples Institute for Mathematics and Education Learning Progressions Narratives Illustrative Mathematics Sample tasks National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics (NCSM) Resources, Lessons, Items National Council of Teacher of Mathematics (NCTM) Resources, Lessons, Items Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC) Resources, Items Expectations for Learning (Tasks and Assessments) Classroom tasks and assessments should be constructed in a way that challenges students to think and apply the information they are learning. Students should be able to summarize, analyze, organize, evaluate, predict, design, create, innovate, etc. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 1 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Mathematics Model Curriculum Expectations for Learning (in development) from ODE Model Curriculum Ohio has selected PARCC as the contractor for the development of the Next Generation Assessments for Mathematics. PARCC is responsible for the development of the framework, blueprints, items, rubrics, and scoring for the assessments. Further information can be found at Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC). Specific information is located at these links: Model Content Framework Item Specifications/Evidence Tables Sample Items Calculator Usage Accommodations Reference Sheets Sample assessment questions are included in this document. The following website has problem of the month problems and tasks that can be used to assess students and help guide your lessons. http://www.noycefdn.org/resources.php http://illustrativemathematics.org http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/itmrlsx/search.aspx http://nrich.maths.org At the end of this topic period students will demonstrate their understanding by…. Some examples include: Constructed Response Performance Tasks Portfolios ***A student’s nine week grade should be based on multiple academic criteria (classroom assignments and teacher made assessments). Instructional Strategies Columbus Curriculum Guide strategies for this topic are included in this document. Also utilize model curriculum, Ohiorc.org, textbooks, InfoOhio, etc. as resources to provide instructional strategies. Websites http://illuminations.nctm.org http://illustrativemathematics.org http://insidemathematics.org http://www.lessonresearch.net/lessonplans1.html Instructional Strategies from ODE Model Curriculum Instructional Strategies Angles are geometric shapes composed of two rays that are infinite in length. Students can understand this concept by using two rulers held together near the ends. The rulers can represent the rays of an angle. As one ruler is rotated, the size of the angle is seen to get larger. Ask questions about the types of angles Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 2 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Mathematics Model Curriculum created. Responses may be in terms of the relationship to right angles. Introduce angles as acute (less than the measure of a right angle) and obtuse (greater than the measure of a right angle). Have students draw representations of each type of angle. They also need to be able to identify angles in two-dimensional figures. Students can also create an angle explorer (two strips of cardboard attached with a brass fastener) to learn about angles. They can use the angle explorer to get a feel of the relative size of angles as they rotate the cardboard strips around. Students can compare angles to determine whether an angle is acute or obtuse. This will allow them to have a benchmark reference for what an angle measure should be when using a tool such as a protractor or an angle ruler. Provide students with four pieces of straw, two pieces of the same length to make one angle and another two pieces of the same length to make an angle with longer rays. Another way to compare angles is to place one angle over the other angle. Provide students with a transparency to compare two angles to help them conceptualize the spread of the rays of an angle. Students can make this comparison by tracing one angle and placing it over another angle. The side lengths of the angles to be compared need to be different. Students are ready to use a tool to measure angles once they understand the difference between an acute angle and an obtuse angle. Angles are measured in degrees. There is a relationship between the number of degrees in an angle and circle which has a measure of 360 degrees. Students are to use a protractor to measure angles in whole-number degrees. They can determine if the measure of the angle is reasonable based on the relationship of the angle to a right angle. They also make sketches of angles of specified measure. Instructional Resources/Tools from ODE Model Curriculum Cardboard cut in strips to make an angle explorer Brass fasteners Protractor Angle ruler Straws Transparencies Angle explorers Ohio Resource Center Sir Cumference and the Great Knight of Angleland: In this story, young Radius, son of Sir Cumference and Lady Di of Ameter, undertakes a quest, the successful completion of which will earn him his knighthood. With the help of a family heirloom that functions much like a protractor, he is able to locate the elusive King Lell and restore him to the throne of Angleland. In gratitude, King Lell bestows knighthood on Sir Radius. This book is an entry on the Ohio Resource Center Mathematics Bookshelf From the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, Figure This: What’s My Angle? math Challenge # 10 Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 3 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Mathematics Model Curriculum Students can estimate the measures of the angles between their fingers when they spread out their hand. From PBS Teachers: 3rd Grade Measuring Game, Identify acute, obtuse and right angles in this online interactive game From PBS Teachers: Star Gazing, Determine the correct angle at which to place a telescope in order to see as many stars as possible in this online interactive game. Misconceptions/Challenges As you teach the lessons, identify the misconceptions/challenges that students have with the concepts being taught. from ODE Model Curriculum Students are confused as to which number to use when determining the measure of an angle using a protractor because most protractors have a double set of numbers. Students should decide first if the angle appears to be an angle that is less than the measure of a right angle (90°) or greater than the measure of a right angle (90°). If the angle appears to be less than 90°, it is an acute angle and its measure ranges from 0° to 89°. If the angle appears to be an angle that is greater than 90°, it is an obtuse angle and its measures range from 91° to 179°. Ask questions about the appearance of the angle to help students in deciding which number to use. Please read the Teacher Introductions, included in this document, for further understanding. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 4 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Teacher Introduction Problem Solving The Common Core State Standards for Mathematical Practices focus on a mastery of mathematical thinking. Developing mathematical thinking through problem solving empowers teachers to learn about their students’ mathematical thinking. Students progressing through the Common Core curriculum have been learning intuitively, concretely, and abstractly while solving problems. This progression has allowed students to understand the relationships of numbers which are significantly different than the rote practice of memorizing facts. Procedures are powerful tools to have when solving problems, however if students only memorize the procedures, then they never develop an understanding of the relationships among numbers. Students need to develop fluency. However, teaching these relationships first, will allow students an opportunity to have a deeper understanding of mathematics. These practices are student behaviors and include: 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. Teaching the mathematical practices to build a mathematical community in your classroom is one of the major reforms in mathematics. The role of the teacher is to facilitate student thinking. These practices are not taught in isolation, but instead are connected to and woven throughout students’ work with the standards. Using open-ended problem solving in your classroom can teach to all of these practices. A problem-based approach to learning focuses on teaching for understanding. In a classroom with a problem-based approach, teaching of content is done THROUGH problem solving. Important math concepts and skills are embedded in the problems. Small group and whole class discussions give students opportunities to make connections between the explicit math skills and concepts from the standards. Open-ended problem solving helps students develop new strategies to solve problems that make sense to them. Misconceptions should be addressed by teachers and students while they discuss their strategies and solutions. When you begin using open-ended problem solving, you may want to choose problems from the Common Core Glossary, Table 2 (below) (multiplication and division situations) to pose to your students. Included are descriptions and examples of multiplication and division word problem structures. It is helpful to understand the type of structure that makes up a word problem. As a teacher, you can create word problems following the structures and also have students follow the structures to create word problems. This will deepen their understanding and give them important clues about ways they can solve a problem. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 5 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Table 2 includes word problem structures/situations for multiplication and division from www.corestandards.org Equal Groups Arrays, 4 Area, 5 Compare 3×6=? There are 3 bags with 6 plums in each bag. How many plums are there in all? Measurement example: You need 3 lengths of string, each 6 inches long. How much string will you need altogether? Measurement example: You have 18 inches of string, which you will cut into 3 equal pieces. How long will each piece of string be? There are 3 rows of apples with 6 apples in each row. How many apples are there? If 18 apples are arranged into 3 equal rows, how many apples will be in each row? If 18 apples are arranged into equal rows of 6 apples, how many rows will there be? Area example: What is the area of a 3 cm by 6 cm rectangle? Area example: A rectangle has an area of 18 square centimeters. If one side is 3 cm long, how long is a side next to it? A red hat costs $18 and that is 3 times as much as a blue hat costs. How much does a blue hat cost? Area example: A rectangle has an area of 18 square centimeters. If one side is 6 cm long, how long is a side next to it? Measurement example: A rubber band is stretched to be 18 cm long and that is 3 times as long as it was at first. How long was the rubber band at first? a × ? = p, and p ÷ a = ? Measurement example: A rubber band was 6 cm long at first. Now it is stretched to be 18 cm long. How many times as long is the rubber band now as it was at first? ? × b = p, and p ÷ b = ? A blue hat costs $6. A red hat costs 3 times as much as the blue hat. How much does the red hat cost? Measurement example: A rubber band is 6 cm long. How long will the rubber band be when it is stretched to be 3 times as long? General Number of Groups Unknown (“How many groups?” Division Group Size Unknown (“How many in each group?” Division) 3 × ? = 18, and 18 ÷ 3 = ? If 18 plums are shared equally into 3 bags, then how many plums will be in each bag? Unknown Product a×b=? ? × 6 = 18, and 18 ÷ 6 = ? If 18 plums are to be packed 6 to a bag, then how many bags are needed? Measurement example: You have 18 inches of string, which you will cut into pieces that are 6 inches long. How many pieces of string will you have? A red hat costs $18 and a blue hat costs $6. How many times as much does the red hat cost as the blue hat? The problem structures become more difficult as you move right and down through the table (i.e. an “Unknown Product-Equal Groups” problem is the easiest, while a “Number of Groups Unknown-Compare” problem is the most difficult). Discuss with students the problem structure/situation, what they know (e.g., groups and group size), and what they are solving for (e.g., product). The Common Core State Standards require students to solve each type of problem in the table throughout the school year. Included in this guide are many sample problems that could be used with your students. There are three categories of word problem structures/situations for multiplication and division: Unknown Product, Group Size Unknown and Number of Groups Unknown. There are three main ideas that the word structures include; equal groups or equal sized units of measure, arrays/areas and comparisons. All problem structures/situations can be represented using symbols and equations. Unknown Product: (a × b = ?) In this structure/situation you are given the number of groups and the size of each group. You are trying to determine the total items in all the groups. Grandma has 4 piles of her famous oatmeal cookies. There are 3 oatmeal cookies in each pile. How many cookies does Grandma have? Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 6 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Group Size Unknown: (a × ? = p and p ÷ a = ?) In this structure/situation you know how many equal groups and the total amount of items. You are trying to determine the size in each group. This is a partition situation. Grandma gives 12 cookies to 4 grandchildren and each grandchild is given the same number of cookies. How many cookies will each grandchild get? Number of Groups Unknown: (? × b = p and p ÷ b = ?) In this structure/situation you know the size in each group and the total amount of items is known. You are trying to determine the number of groups. This is a measurement situation. Grandma gave 12 cookies to some of her grandchildren. She gave each grandchild 3 cookies. How many grandchildren got cookies? Students should also be engaged in multi-step problems and logic problems (Reason abstractly and quantitatively). They should be looking for patterns and thinking critically about problem situations (Look for and make use of structure and Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning). Problems should be relevant to students and make a real-world connection whenever possible. The problems should require students to use 21st Century skills, including critical thinking, creativity/innovation, communication and collaboration (Model with mathematics). Technology will enhance the problem solving experience. Problem solving may look different from grade level to grade level, room to room and problem to problem. However, all open-ended problem solving has three main components. In each session, the teacher poses a problem, gives students the freedom to solve the problem (using math tools, drawing a picture, acting it out, etc.), and record their thinking. Finally, the students share their thinking and strategies (Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others). Component 1- Pose the problem Problems posed during the focus lesson lead to a discussion that focuses on a concept being taught. Once an open-ended problem is posed, students should solve the problem independently and/or in small groups. As the year progresses, some of the problems posed during the Math APSS part of the One-Hour Block of Math will take multiple days to solve (Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them). Students may solve the problem over one or more class sessions. The sharing and questioning may take place during a different class session. Component 2- Solve the problem During open-ended problems, students need to record their thinking. Students can record their thinking either formally using an ongoing math notebook or informally using white boards or thinking paper. Formal math notebooks allow you, parents, and students to see growth as the year progresses. Math notebooks also give students the opportunity to refer back to previous strategies when solving new problems. Teachers should provide opportunities for students to revise their solutions and explanations as other students share their thinking. Students’ written explanations should include their “work”. This could be equations, numbers, pictures, etc. If Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 7 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 students used math tools to solve the problem, they should include a picture to represent how the tools were used. Students’ writing should include an explanation of their strategy as well as justification or proof that their answer is reasonable and correct. Component 3- Share solutions, strategies and thinking After students have solved the problem, gather the class together as a whole to share students’ thinking. Ask one student or group to share their method of solving the problem while the rest of the class listens. Early in the school year, the teacher models for students how to ask clarifying questions and questions that require the student(s) presenting to justify the use of their strategy. As the year progresses, students should ask the majority of questions during the sharing of strategies and solutions. Possible questions the students could ask include “Why did you solve the problem that way?” or “How do you know your answer is correct?” or “Why should I use your strategy the next time I solve a similar problem?” When that student or group is finished, ask another student in the class to explain in his/her own words what they think the student did to solve the problem. Ask students if the problem could be solved in a different way and encourage them to share their solution. You could also “randomly” pick a student or group who used a strategy you want the class to understand. Calling on students who used a good strategy but did not arrive at the correct answer also leads to rich mathematical discussions and gives students the opportunity to “critique the reasoning of others”. This highlights that the answer is not the most important part of open-ended problem solving and that it’s alright to take risks and make mistakes. At the end of each session, the mathematical thinking should be made explicit for students so they fully understand the strategies and solutions of the problem. Misconceptions should be addressed. As students share their strategies, you may want to give the strategies names and post them in the room. When you give the strategy a name (i.e., “What Thomas did is called the ‘Guess and Check’ strategy.”) it helps students to write and discuss their work more precisely. Add to the list as strategies come up during student sharing rather than starting the year with a whole list posted. This keeps students from assuming the strategies on a pre-printed list are the ONLY strategies that can be used. Possible strategies students may use include: Act It Out Make a Table Find a Pattern Guess and Check Make a List Draw a Picture When you use open-ended problem solving in your mathematics instruction, students should have access to a variety of problem solving “math tools” to use as they find solutions to problems. Several types of math tools can be combined into one container that is placed on the table so that students have a choice as they solve each problem, or math tools can be located in a part of the classroom where students have easy access to them. Remember that math tools, such as place value blocks or color tiles, do not teach a concept, but are used to represent a concept. Therefore, students may select math tools to represent an idea or relationship for which that tool is not typically used (e.g., ten bears may be used to represent a group of 10 rather than selecting a rod or ten individual cubes). Some examples of math tools may include: one inch color tiles, centimeter cubes, Unifix® or snap cubes, two-color counters, and frog, bear or other type of animal counters. Students should also have access to a hundred chart and a number line. Problem solving can occur in a variety of settings in classrooms. Students may sit in pairs or small student groups using math tools to solve a problem while recording their thinking on Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 8 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 whiteboards. Students could solve a problem using role playing or SMART Board manipulatives to act it out. Occasionally whole group thinking with the teacher modeling how to record strategies can be useful. These whole group recordings can be kept in a class problem solving book. As students have more experience solving problems they should become more refined in their use of tools. The first several weeks of open-ended problem solving can be a daunting and overwhelming experience. A routine needs to be established so that students understand the expectations during problem solving time. Initially, the sessions can seem loud and disorganized while students become accustomed to the math tools and the problem solving process. Students become more familiar with the routine as the year progresses, so don’t abandon the process if it doesn’t run smoothly the first few times you try. The more regularly you engage students in open-ended problem solving, the more organized the sessions become. The benefits and rewards of using a problem-based approach to teaching and learning mathematics far outweigh the initial confusion of this approach. Using the open-ended problem solving approach helps our students to grow as problem solvers and critical thinkers. Engaging your students in this process frequently will prepare them for success as 21st Century learners. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 9 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Teacher Introduction Angles The purpose of the Teacher Introductions is to build content knowledge for teachers. Having depth of knowledge for the Measurement and Data domain is helpful when assessing student work and student thinking. This information could be used to guide classroom discussions, understand student misconceptions and provide differentiation opportunities. The focus of instruction is the Common Core Mathematics Standards. Angles Two rays that share the same endpoint or vertex form an angle. The rays are the sides of the angle. The angle is named with a letter (the name of its vertex) or with three letters (three points on the angle, with the vertex in the middle). The interior of an The exterior of an angle is the B Angle Names: angle is the area A C B, ABC, CBA between the two rays. the size of an angle is degrees. A degree can be defined as area of used to describe The unitoutside of measure a wedge shaped unit. All angles are measured in terms of a circle. One complete rotation is the two rays. 360º. If both rays of an angle were placed together, the measure of that angle would be 0º. When one ray of the angle is rotated a quarter turn from 0º, it is a 90º angle. If the rotation continues a quarter of the way each turn, the angles modeled would be 180º, 270º, and 360º angles. 0º 90º 180º 270º 360º beginning quarter turn half turn quarter turn (three-quarters) full turn Angles are classified and named by their angle measures. Right Angle exactly 90º Grade 4 Angle Measurement A right angle measures exactly 90º. Students can use the corner of a sheet of paper to determine an angle classification by placing its corner onto the vertex and lining up one edge of the paper with one ray of the angle. If the corner fits into the angle perfectly so both rays are touching the edge of the paper, it is a right angle. Page 10 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Obtuse Angle greater than 90º and less than 180º An obtuse angle measures greater than 90º but less than 180º. An obtuse angle can be identified when one edge of the paper is lined on one ray of an angle and the other ray can be seen outside the other edge of the paper. Acute Angle less than 90º An acute angle measures less than 90º. An acute angle can be identified when one edge of the paper is lined up on one ray and the other ray lies under the paper. Straight Angle exactly 180º A straight angle measures exactly 180º. A straight angle can also be called a straight line. A straight angle can be identified if one edge of the paper can line up with both rays of the angle. A reflex angle measures greater than 180 and less than 360 . A reflex angle can look like an acute or obtuse angle, depending on its position. Using a pie as a model, remove one slice. The missing portion could look like an acute or obtuse angle depending on the size of the slice. The measure of an angle is determined by the degree or rotation of an angle side, or more simply stated, how far one side is turned from the other side. Stated differently, an angle’s measure is the measure of the spread of its rays. Some students may have the misconception that the length of the rays determines the measure of an angle. Hands-on experiences with measuring angles will help clear up any misunderstandings. Both angles are the same measure, although the length of their rays is distinctly different. Reflex Angle greater than 180 and less than 360 Students will be expected to use benchmark angles (e.g., 45 , 90 , 120 ) to estimate the measure of angles and use a protractor to measure and draw angles. Before students can effectively use a Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 11 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 protractor to determine angle measures, they must have a conceptual foundation of the relative size of angles and their relationships to one another. Many protractors are confusing for students, as two sets of numbers, an inner ring and an outer ring, appear on a protractor, and students must decide which set of numbers to use. When students rely on their conceptual knowledge and the benchmark angles to measure, they build a deeper understanding of angle sizes. In addition to estimating angle measures based on the benchmark angles, students will use a protractor to determine angle measures. To measure an angle using a protractor, place the arrow of the center point of the protractor located on or along the bottom edge on the vertex of the angle. Align one of the angle’s rays with the 0 mark. Find the place where the other ray crosses the protractor and determine which row of numbers to use. Estimating the angle’s measure first will eliminate confusion about which ring of numbers to use. Students will also use physical models to determine the sum of the interior angles of triangles and quadrilaterals. An interior angle can be defined as an angle on the inside of a shape. Determining the sum of the interior angles can easily be illustrated with a physical model. A triangle has three interior angles. To determine their sum, tear the triangle into three parts so that each angle is in a separate part, and line up the angle rays. When the three interior angles are put together, they measure 180 , or a straight line. To determine the sum of the interior angles of a quadrilateral, the same exploration can be used. A quadrilateral has four interior angles. To determine their sum, tear the quadrilateral into four parts so that each vertex is in one part and line up the angle rays. When the four interior angles are put together, they measure 360 , or the measure of a circle. This idea applies to any quadrilateral. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 12 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Another way to determine the number of degrees in a quadrilateral is to remember that every quadrilateral can be divided into two triangles. If the measure of the sum of the angles in a triangle is 180°, then the measure of the sum of the angles in a quadrilateral must be 360° (180° + 180°). Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 13 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Label the vertex, rays, interior, and exterior of the angle below. Justin is building a ramp for his skateboard from the arrow on the ground to the front of the top step. Draw the ramp, label the angle formed by the ramp and the ground with a letter, and give the measure of the angle formed. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 14 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEM Answers/Rubrics Label the vertex, rays, interior, and exterior of the angle below. interior Answer: ray ray vertex exterior A 2-point response must have all parts labeled correctly as shown. A 1-point response has one or two incorrect or missing labels. A 0-point response shows no mathematical understanding of the question. Justin is building a ramp for his skateboard from the arrow on the ground to the front of the top step. Draw the ramp, label the angle formed by the ramp and the ground with a letter, and give the measure of the angle formed. A Answer: A = 20 Accept answers that are within +/- 5 of 20 . The students can label the angle with any letter(s). If three letters are used there should be one letter on each ray and one letter on the vertex. If one letter is used it should be on the vertex or in the interior of the angle near the vertex. The response may also show an arc to indicate the angle, but this does not need to be included for full credit. A 2-point response includes a ramp, a labeled angle (e.g., measure for the angle within 5 degrees of 20 . A or BAC), and an appropriate A 1-point response correctly completes two of the three tasks required or draws a ramp to a point other than the front of the top step and properly labels and measures that angle. A 0-point response completes only one of the three tasks required (e.g., only draws the ramp) or shows no understanding of this task. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 15 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS In the box, explain how to use a protractor to measure A. Then use a protractor to find the measure of A. Draw the obtuse angle that when placed with A would form a straight angle. Label that angle and give its measure. A= A At the school carnival Rey went in a straight line from the Fish Bowl Toss to the Dunking Booth. He then decided that he was thirsty and headed in a straight line to the Lemonade Stand. Draw the path that Rey took with his three stops at the carnival. Label the angle formed with a letter(s), use a protractor to measure the angle, and tell what type of angle is formed by Rey's path. Carnival Map Dunking Booth Beanbag Toss Fish Bowl Toss Hula Hoop Contest Pie Eating Contest Lemonade Stand French Fry Stand Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 16 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Answers/Rubrics In the box, explain how to use a protractor to measure A. Then use a protractor to find the measure of A. Draw the obtuse angle that when placed with A would form a straight angle. Label that angle and give its measure. Answer: A B B= A= 145° 35° A 4-point response includes a correct measure for angle A + /- 5°, an obtuse angle that forms a straight angle with a label and the correct measure and a complete explanation of how to use a protractor to measure an angle. A 3-point response includes a complete explanation with a minor error in the angle measures (e.g., the sum of the two angles is not 180°) or no label on the second angle. A 2-point response includes correct angle measures with a weak or no explanation or a complete explanation with incorrect angle measures. A 1-point response includes one correct angle measure with a weak explanation. At the school carnival Rey went in a straight line from the Fish Bowl Toss to the Dunking Booth. He then decided thatresponse he was thirsty andno headed in a straightunderstanding line to the Lemonade Stand. A 0-point shows mathematical of this task.Draw the path that Rey took with his three stops at the carnival. Label the angle formed with a letter(s), use a protractor to measure the angle, and tell what type of angle is formed by Rey's path. Carnival Map Answer: The angle is 115° and is an obtuse angle. Letters used to label the angle will vary. A B Dunking Booth Fish Bowl Toss A Beanbag Toss Hula Hoop Contest Pie Eating Contest C Lemonade Stand French Fry Stand A 2-point response includes a correctly drawn angle that has been labeled, measured correctly within 5 of 115 , and classified as obtuse. A 1-point response includes correct information for an angle that is drawn to different booths than the ones specified in the problem or includes the correct angle measure for the given path but neglects to address one of the other parts of the problem (i.e., angle is not labeled or angle is not classified as obtuse). A 0-point response shows no understanding of this task. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 17 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Select the correct angle measure and name for ABC. C B A A. 135; acute B. 135 ; acute C. 135 ; obtuse D. 135; obtuse Use a protractor to measure the interior angles of Figure A and Figure B. Which answer shows the correct sum for the interior angles of each figure? Figure A Figure B A. Figure A = 270 Figure B = 180 B. Figure A = 180 Figure B = 360 C. Figure A = 360 Figure B = 90 D. Figure A = 360 Figure B = 180 Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 18 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Answers/Rubrics Select the correct angle measure and name for ABC. C B A A. 135; acute B. 135 ; acute C. 135 ; obtuse D. 135; obtuse Answer: C Use a protractor to measure the interior angles of Figure A and Figure B. Which answer shows the correct sum for the interior angles of each figure? A. Figure A = 270 Figure B = 180 B. Figure A = 180 Figure B = 360 C. Figure A = 360 Figure B = 90 D. Figure A = 360 Figure B = 180 Answer: D Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 19 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Find the measure of F in the quadrilateral below. 159 F 47 103 A. 43 B. 51 C. 61 D. 73 . Diagonal BD bisects parallelogram ABCD. Without using a protractor, determine the measure of the angles below. Explain how you found the measure of the angles. A B 30° D D Grade 4 Angle Measurement 30° B 120° A Page 20 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Answers/Rubrics Find the measurement of F in the quadrilateral below. 159 F 47 103 A. 43 B. 51 C. 61 D. 73 Answer: B Diagonal BD bisects parallelogram ABCD. Without using a protractor determine the measure of the angles below. Explain how you found the measure of the angles. A B 30° Answer: D 60° B 60° A 120° 30° D 120° C A 4-point response includes correct angle measures and a complete explanation (e.g., A quadrilateral has a total of 360°. The triangle that is labeled has 180° and is exactly half of the parallelogram. Adding together two smaller 30° angles to get 60° gives the measure of ADC and CBA. 120° ( BCD) + 60° ( ADC) + 60° ( CBA) = 240°. 360° - 240° = 120° which is the measure of A.) A 3-point response includes correct angle measures with an explanation that has minor omissions. A 2-point response includes correct angle measures with a weak or no explanation. A 1-point response gives one correct measure with no explanation. A 0-point response shows no mathematical understanding of this task. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 21 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Without using a protractor, use the following drawing to find the measure of BAD. BAC measures 90°. Explain your answer. B 75° D A C Amy has drawn a quadrilateral with interior angles that measure 63 , 78 , and 100 . She forgot to record the measure of the final interior angle. Explain how to determine the measure of that angle. Write the measure in the angle. 100 78 63 Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 22 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Answers/Rubrics Without using a protractor, use the following drawing to find the measure of measures 90°. Explain your answer. BAD. BAC Answer: The sum of the interior angles in a triangle is 180 . If you add ACD which is 90° (the box on the angles indicates B 90°) and ADC which is 75° the total is 165°. 75° 180° - 165° = 15° so DAC would be 15°. BAC is 90° so 90° - 15° (measure of DAC) = 75° which is the measure of BAD. A A 4-point response includes a correct angle measure for BAD with a complete explanation. D C A 3-point response includes a complete explanation with a minor error in computation that leads to an incorrect angle measure. A 2-point response includes a correct angle measure with a weak or no explanation. A 1-point response shows major errors in reasoning. A 0-point response shows no mathematical understanding of this task. Amy has drawn a quadrilateral with interior angles that measure 63 , 78 , and 100 . She forgot to record the measure of the final interior angle. Explain how to determine the measure of that angle. Write the measure in the angle. 100 78 63 Answer: The missing measure is 119°. The sum of the interior angles in a quadrilateral is 360 . If you add up the three angles that you know and subtract that sum from 360, the difference will be the number of degrees in the fourth interior angle. A 2-point response includes a correct angle measure with a complete explanation. A 1-point response includes a correct angle measure with a weak or no explanation or a complete explanation with an incorrect angle measure due to a computational error. A 0-point response shows no mathematical understanding of this task. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 23 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS 1) Label the interior and exterior of this triangle. Then, using letters, label the vertices. 2) The triangle above is an equilateral triangle. Without using a protractor, label the measure of each of its angles. Explain how you were able to determine the measures without a protractor. 3) In this isosceles triangle, would the sum of the angles be different than in the equilateral triangle? Explain your answer. 4) Using a protractor, measure and label each angle of the isosceles triangle. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 24 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Answers/Rubrics B 60° Exterior Interior A 60° 60° C 1) Label the interior and exterior of this triangle. Then, using letters, label the vertices. 2) This is an equilateral triangle. Without using a protractor, label the measure of each of its angles. Explain how you were able to determine the measures without a protractor. Label 60 for each of the three angles. The sum of the three interior angles of all triangles is 180 . Knowing that this is an equilateral triangle means all of the angles are equal, so each angle must be 60 (180 ÷ 3 = 60°). 3) In this isosceles triangle, would the sum of the angles be different than in the equilateral triangle? Explain your answer. No, every triangle has a sum of 180°. The angles will not all measure 60°, but the sum of all three angles will still be 180°. B 20° A C 4) Using a protractor, measure and label each angle of the isosceles triangle. Answer: Grade 4 Angle Measurement BAC = 75 ACB = 75 ABC = 30 Page 25 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 TEACHING STRATEGIES/ACTIVITIES Vocabulary: angle, circle, circular arc, points, end point, rays, endpoints, degree, intersect, one-degree angle, protractor, n degree, straight, obtuse, acute, right, vertex, ray, degree, equation, variable, difference, additive, decompose, measure 1. The word problems below can be presented to students in a variety of ways. Some options include: using the questions to create a choice-board, Math-O board, one problem per class session, one problem each evening for homework, partner work or as an assessment question. The strength of problem solving lies in the rich discussion afterward. As the school year progresses students should be able to justify their own thinking as well as the thinking of others. This can be done through comparing strategies, arguing another student’s solution strategy or summarizing another student’s sharing. Find the value for Angle X. Label it as acute, obtuse, or right. Explain how you got your answer. X 165° A water sprinkler rotates one-degree each interval. If the sprinkler rotated threefourths of the way around the circle before it broke, how many one-degree turns did the sprinkler make? Stanley is in an extremely slow revolving door. It makes 30 one-degree turns every 4 minutes. At that rate, how long will it take Stanley to complete the full circle and get back to where he started? Members of the Ohio State Marching Band were practicing on the field. At the end of a song, they perform an “about face” and rotate until they are facing the opposite end of the field. How many one-degree turns are in an “about face”? A toy chest is broken. When new, the lid opened 90. Now it only opens 37. How much further does the lid need to open to be like new? Using your protractor, make a diagram showing how the toy chest opens. Use your protractor to draw and measure an acute angle. Switch angles with a partner. What is the difference in degrees between the two angles? A flagpole was damaged in a wind storm. On Friday, it was leaning 18°from its original position. On Saturday, it fell another 29°. How many degrees from the ground is the pole now standing? Ralphie was looking at a clock and noticed the hands made an angle of about 120. Classify the angle as acute, obtuse, or right. What time could it have been? Stevie used his protractor to measure angle HIJ. What measurement did he get for angle HIJ ? He went to lunch and when he returned, his protractor was gone. Explain to Stevie how he can find the measurement of angle JIK without his protractor. Find the measurement of angle JIK. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 26 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 J K H I If the two rays are perpendicular, what is the value of h? 41° h 35° 2. https://www.georgiastandards.org/Common-Core/Pages/Math-K-5.aspx Go to the above web page, open grade 4 on the right side of the page. Open “Unit 7 Framework Student Edition.” These tasks are from the Georgia Department of Education. The tasks build on one another. You may or may not use all of the tasks. There are four different types of tasks. Scaffolding tasks build up to the constructing tasks which develop a deep understanding of the concept. Next, there are practice tasks and finally performance tasks which are a summative assessment for the unit. Select the tasks that best fit with your lessons and the standards being taught at that time. 3. Using the straight edge of a protractor, students draw an assortment of different-sized angles. Students need to label their angles as follows: A, B, etc. Students trade papers with a partner and decide whether the angles are acute, obtuse, or right. Give each student an “Angle Measurement Lab Sheet” (included in this Curriculum Guide). Record the angle name and the type of each angle on the lab sheet. Then, students record their estimates of the measure of each angle. Finally, students use a protractor to measure each angle and record the actual measurement. Students need to get into the habit of estimating angle measures before actually using the protractor to measure. On most protractors, there are two sets of numbers. If a student knows that an angle is acute, he or she will know which number to use. For example, the student sees the numbers 60° and 120° at the same point on the protractor. If the student has decided that the angle is acute, prior to measuring it, the angle must measure 60° 4. Using a straight edge, draw an angle on the overhead. As a group, estimate the size of the angle in relation to 90°. Give each student a protractor and explain that it is a tool used to measure angles. Ask if anyone knows how to use the protractor to measure an angle. Allow students to come to the overhead to show how they would measure the angle. The steps for using a protractor are included below: Find the center point on the straight edge of the protractor. Place the center point over the vertex, or point, of the angle you wish to measure. Use the benchmark angles to estimate the measure of the angle (45 , 90 , 120 , and 180 ). This will help students determine which set of numbers to use on the protractor. Line up the zero on the straight edge of the protractor with one of the sides of the angle and look to see if the 0 is in the bottom set of numbers or the top set of numbers. Determine which set of numbers will be used on the protractor. Make sure the second ray of the angle is pointed towards the curved side of the protractor. Find the point where the second side of the angle intersects the curved edge of the protractor. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 27 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 6. 7. 8. 9. Read the number that is written on the protractor at the point of intersection. This is the measure of the angle in degrees. Make sure that the answer is reasonable. If the angle is acute, then the measure should be less than 90°. If the angle is obtuse, then the measure should be more than 90°. If your answer is not reasonable, check to make sure you have used the correct set of numbers on the protractor. Next, ask a student to label the vertex, interior, exterior, and rays on the angle. Demonstrate with several other angles how to use the protractor and how to label the different parts of an angle. Tell students to use the straight edge of their protractor to draw an angle less than 180 in their math journals or on a plain piece of paper. Instruct students to measure their angle, record the measurement on their worksheet, and then label each part of their angle. Have students find a partner, switch papers, measure their partner’s angle, check the labeling, and then draw a new angle for their partner to measure and label. Distribute “Angle Measure” (included in this Curriculum Guide) to all students and have them complete it. Discuss the labels and angle measures as a class, focusing on any differences. Tell students they need to be within 5 of the correct angle measure. Provide students with copies of “Circle Geoboard Dot Paper” (included in this Curriculum Guide). Instruct students to draw one angle on each of the geoboards and estimate the measure of the angle. They should include a label (e.g., A, B, C, etc.) and the estimated measure of the angle they drew in degrees inside each angle. (Colored pencils can be used to help students easily see their angles. The label and the number of degrees for each angle could be written in the same color as the rays of the angle.) Make sure that students include benchmark measurements of a 90 angle, a 180 angle, and a 270 angle somewhere on the geoboards. Ask students to record and explain on another sheet of paper how they estimated the measure of each angle. For example, a student might draw a 45 angle on the geoboard and label it A. On their other paper they would state that angle A is a 45 angle because they drew a line down the middle of a 90 angle, cutting it in half. Finally, students could trade Circle Geoboard Dot Paper with a partner and have the partner actually measure the angles to see if the estimates are reasonable. Demonstrate on the overhead how to draw an angle of a given measure. Start by drawing a straight line with a dot at one end that will be one of the rays of the angle. The dot will be the vertex. Place the protractor so that the middle point is on the dot and the line goes toward 0. Find the measure of the angle you want to make and put a tick mark above it. Take the protractor away and use a straight edge to connect the dot on the line at the vertex with the tick mark, creating the angle. The line that is drawn is the other ray of the angle. Model drawing several other angles of different sizes. Give each student a large piece of paper and a protractor. Have students fold the paper so that it is divided into eight sections. Put up eight different angle measures on the overhead or chalkboard. Students label the top of each section of the paper with one of the measures. Using a protractor, students create the given angles. Once the angles are drawn, label the interior, exterior, vertex, and rays of each angle. In each section, also write whether the angle is acute, obtuse, straight, or right. Have students divide a sheet of paper into six rectangles. Using the straight edge of a protractor, students draw a different-sized angle in each rectangle. Students trade papers with a partner and decide whether the angles on the paper are acute, right, or obtuse and then estimate the measure of each angle. Using a protractor, students then find the exact measure of each angle. If students get into a habit of estimating angles first and then using a protractor to measure the angle, they will have a better understanding of what the angle measures look like. For example: If an angle is first estimated as an acute angle, when the protractor is placed on the vertex of the angle students can look at the two possible numbers and make a decision. If students see the numbers 60° and 120 where the ray crosses the Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 28 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 protractor and they know from their estimate that this angle is acute, then they can determine the correct measure of the angle is 60 rather than 120. 10. Have students draw and label five different angles on the “Angles Comparison Worksheet” (included in this Curriculum Guide). Be sure that the angles include acute, right, and obtuse examples. Exchange papers with a partner and have them estimate the measure of each angle using benchmark measures of 45°, 90°, 120°, and 180°. Return the papers to the original student. Measure each angle using a protractor and determine the amount of difference between the estimate and actual measure. Who was closest? What are you using to help you make accurate estimates? What are other strategies you could use to estimate more effectively? 11. Students need to understand that the length of the rays (angle sides) do not influence the size or measure of the angle. Have students find the same size angle in different-sized objects in the classroom and/or have them draw angles and then reduce or double the length of the angle sides. Have students measure the angle again to determine its size. 12. Divide the class into six groups. Distribute “The Angler Project Cards” (included in this Curriculum Guide). There should be one card at each station/desk. Each student will need a pencil, a protractor, and paper. Assign each group to a beginning table station. Students are given a set number of minutes (the time given may vary from class to class based on the readiness level of the students) to read the question and complete the task. Instruct students to draw any straight lines they need using the straight edge on their protractor. They should not draw any lines freehand. At the end of the allotted time, ring a bell and have students rotate stations. When each group has been to all six stations, have them create a poster with the papers from their group and title it The Angler. Make sure each group discusses the completed tasks from their group and self correct any errors before putting the papers on the poster. The cards can also be distributed to small groups, and groups can choose four of the six cards to complete. 13. Distribute the “Maddening Measurements” sheet (included in this Curriculum Guide) to each student. Students estimate the angle measures and then find the actual measures using a protractor. Ask students to find pairs of angles that are the same measure. Does the length of the ray have an effect on the measure of the angle? Have students write in their math journals or on a sheet of paper about their discoveries when measuring angles with different ray lengths. 14. Give each student a copy of “Sum of the Angles in a Triangle" (included in this Curriculum Guide). Ask students to measure the three angles of triangle ABC and put the measure of each angle in the appropriate box located in the angle. Tell students not to use the black dots near the vertices to measure the angles; they should use the vertex itself. The black dots are for the other part of the activity. They should then find the sum of the three angles of that triangle and record it in the center of the triangle. Students then use a ruler or the edge of their protractor to draw a straight line on a blank sheet of paper. Have students use their protractor to measure the straight line and determine that it measures 180 . Students cut out triangle ABC and tear it into three pieces so that each piece contains one of the angles (see the teacher introduction for a model). Rearrange the angles so that the black dots in the vertices of the angles are toward the straight angle. Glue all the angles from the triangle on the line so that the angle rays are touching each other. Instruct students to complete the same process for triangles LMN and XYZ. Challenge students to draw a triangle that they think this procedure will not work for. Have them cut the triangle out and give it to you. You can quickly tear off the angles and arrange them on the overhead to show that they equal 180 . Repeat this process with as many of the student-generated triangles as necessary until the class is convinced that the sum of the angles of every triangle is 180 . Discuss: What conclusions can you draw based on what we just did? What do you predict will happen if we Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 29 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 repeated the same experiment with quadrilaterals? Can you figure out another way to test the conclusion? 15. Give each student a copy of “Congruent Triangles” (included in this Curriculum Guide) that has been copied on colored paper, scissors, glue, a protractor, and a blank sheet of paper. Have students cut out the triangles. Ask them to find a way to arrange each pair of congruent triangles so that they form a quadrilateral, and glue the quadrilateral on the blank paper. Ask students what they know about the sum of the angles in one triangle. Since there are 180° in one triangle and each quadrilateral is made up of two triangles, how many degrees are there in a quadrilateral? (360°) Have students measure the angles of their quadrilateral to verify that they add up to 360°. Give students a copy of “Making Triangles” (included in this Curriculum Guide). Once students have completed the activity, challenge students to come to the overhead and draw a quadrilateral that cannot be divided into two triangles. They will soon discover that every quadrilateral can be divided into two triangles, each of which contains 180°. This proves that every quadrilateral has a total of 360°. 16. Give each student a copy of “Degrees in a Quadrilateral” (included in this Curriculum Guide). Ask students to measure the angles in each quadrilateral with a protractor and put the measure of each angle in the appropriate box located in the angle. Cut out the quadrilaterals one at a time and tear them into four parts so that each part contains an angle. Draw a point on a blank sheet of paper. Arrange the angles so that the vertices all touch the point creating 360°. Draw a point for the next quadrilateral and then cut it out and repeat the process from above until all three of the quadrilaterals have been completed. Students will see that the four angles of a quadrilateral will always equal 360 . 17. Divide students into pairs. Distribute a protractor and the “Polygon Shapes Record Sheet” (included in this Curriculum Guide) to each pair of students. Direct students to count the sides of each regular polygon (all sides and all angles of the polygon are the same) and measure each angle. Record the name of the polygon, the number of sides, the measure of each angle, and the sum of all angles on the table. Discuss any patterns that relate the number of sides a polygon has to the measure of its angles and to its angle sum. Students will see the measure of each interior angle increases with the number of sides. They will also see that the sum of all of the interior angles increases by 180º with each additional side that is added to a polygon. Have students write facts that they can conclude from the chart into their math journals. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 30 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 RESOURCES Textbook: Mathematics, Scott Foresman-Addison Wesley (2004): pp. 440-443 Supplemental: Mathematics, Scott Foresman-Addison Wesley (2004): Enrichment Master pp. 98 Practice Master pp. 98 Problem Solving Master pp. 98 Reteaching Master pp. 98 INTERDISCIPLINARY CONNECTIONS 1. Literature Connections: Sir Cumference and the great Knight of Angleland by Cindy Neuschwander Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 31 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving Questions Find the value for Angle X. Label it as acute, obtuse, or right. Explain how you got your answer. X 165° A water sprinkler rotates one-degree each interval. If the sprinkler rotated three-fourths of the way around the circle before it broke, how many one-degree turns did the sprinkler make? Stanley is in an extremely slow revolving door. It makes 30 one-degree turns every 4 minutes. At that rate, how long will it take Stanley to complete the full circle and get back to where he started? Members of the Ohio State Marching Band were practicing on the field. At the end of a song, they perform an “about face” and rotate until they are facing the opposite end of the field. How many one-degree turns are in an “about face”? A toy chest is broken. When new, the lid opened 90. Now it only opens 37. How much further does the lid need to open to be like new? Using your protractor, make a diagram showing how the toy chest opens. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 32 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving Questions Use your protractor to draw and measure an acute angle. Switch angles with a partner. What is the difference in degrees between the two angles? A flagpole was damaged in a wind storm. On Friday, it was leaning 18 from its original position. On Saturday, it fell another 29 How many degrees from the ground is the pole now standing? Ralphie was looking at a clock and noticed the hands made an angle of about 120. Classify the angle as acute, obtuse, or right. What time could it have been? Stevie used his protractor to measure angle HIJ. What measurement did he get for angle HIJ? He went to lunch and when he returned, his protractor was gone. Explain to Stevie how he can find the measurement of Angle JIK without his protractor. Find the measurement of angle JIK. J K H I If the two rays are perpendicular, what is the value of h? 41° Grade 4 Angle Measurement h 35° Page 33 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving Questions Answers Find the value for Angle X. Explain how you got your answer. Answer Key Answer: Angle X = 105 degrees = obtuse. 90 + 165 = 255 degrees 360 – 255 = 105 degrees X= 105° 165° A water sprinkler rotates one-degree each interval. If the sprinkler rotated three-fourths of the way around the circle before it broke, how many one-degree turns did the sprinkler make? Answer: The sprinkler made 270 one-degree turns. ¾ of 360 = 270. Stanley is in an extremely slow revolving door. It makes 30 one-degree turns every 4 minutes. At that rate, how long will it take Stanley to complete the full circle and get back to where he started? Answer: It will take Stanley 48 minutes to complete the full circle. There are 12 30-degree sections in 360 degrees. 12 x 4 min. = 48 min. Members of the Ohio State Marching Band were practicing on the field. At the end of a song, they perform an “about face” and rotate until they are facing the opposite end of the field. How many onedegree turns are in an “about face”? Answer: There are 180 one-degree turns in an “about face.” If they face the opposite direction, then the band members have turned a half circle, or ½ of 360°. A toy chest is broken. When new, the lid opened 90°. Now it only opens 37°. How much further does the lid need to open to be like new? Using your protractor, make a diagram showing how the toy chest opens. Answer: The lid needs to open another 53° to reach 90°. 90° 37° = 53° 37 Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 34 of 53 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving Questions Answers Use your protractor to draw and measure an acute angle. Switch angles with a partner. What is the difference in degrees between the two angles? Answers will vary. Students may calculate the degree difference by subtracting the measurements or by using the protractor to see the difference. A flagpole was damaged in a wind storm. On Friday, it was leaning 18°from its original position. On Saturday, it fell another 29°. How many degrees from the ground is the pole now standing? Answer: The pole is now at a 43°angle from the ground. 18° + 29 °= 47°total slant 90°- 47°= 43° Ralphie was looking at a clock and noticed the hands made an angle of about 120°. Classify the angle as acute, obtuse, or right. What time could it have been? Answers will vary. It is an obtuse angle. A 120°angle is a span of 20 minutes on the clock. Possible answers: 4:00, 12:20, 8:00, 3:35 etc. Stevie used his protractor to measure angle HIJ. What measurement did he get for angle HIJ? He went to lunch and when he returned, his protractor was gone. Explain to Stevie how he can find the measurement of angle JIK without his protractor. Find the measurement of angle JIK. Answer: Angle JIK = 45°. Since the two angle degrees added together must equal 180°,and Stevie had already found Angle HIJ to be 135°, then he knows the second angle must be 45°. 135° + 45° = 180° J K H I If the two rays are perpendicular, what is the value of h? 41 h 35 Answer: h = 14. 41 + h + 35 Grade 4 Angle Measurement = 90 Page 35 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Angle Measurement Lab Sheet Angles drawn by ____________________________ Angles measured by _________________________ Angle Name ( A ) Type of Angle (acute, obtuse, right) Estimate of Angle Size Actual Measure of Angle Attach the sheet of paper where the angles were drawn. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 36 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Angle Measure Name Directions: Use three letters to label each angle and measure each angle. 1. 2. 3. 4. Directions: Write the words vertex, interior, exterior, and ray on each angle to indicate their location. 5. 6. 7. 8. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 37 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Angle Measure Answer Key Directions: Use three letters to label each angle and measure each angle. Letters used for labeling the angles will vary. 1. 2. 30 M A L 60 B C N 3. 4. Q F G 112 65 E R S Directions: Write the words vertex, interior, exterior, and ray on each angle to indicate their location. Ray 5. 6. Ray Exterior Ray Exterior Interior Ray Interior Exterior Ray vertex vertex 8. 7. Ray Ray Interior Ray Interior vertex Exterior vertex Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 38 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Circle Geoboard Dot Paper Name Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 39 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Angles Comparison Worksheet Name Angle #1 Estimate Angle #2 Actual Measure Estimate Actual Measure Angle #3 Estimate Angle #4 Estimate Actual Measure Angle #5 Actual Measure Grade 4 Angle Measurement Estimate Page 40 of 53 Actual Measure Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 The Angler Project Cards Draw a triangle where all three angles are acute. Give the measure of each angle. Now, try to draw a triangle where all three angles are obtuse. What do you notice? Use your protractor to measure angle A. Give the measure of angle A and tell if it is an acute, an obtuse, or a right angle. Explain how you know. A Draw a triangle that contains a 45 angle. Then, draw a polygon that is not a triangle that also contains a 45 angle. How are the polygons similar? Different? Draw a polygon that contains at least two acute angles. Then, draw a polygon that contains an obtuse angle. What strategy did you use to draw the polygon? Draw one acute, one obtuse, and one right angle. Give the measure of each angle. Then, draw a different acute, obtuse, and right angle and give their measures. Draw two angles. Make one a 55 angle and the other a 125 angle. What would happen if you combined the angles? Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 41 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Maddening Measurements Name A B estimate estimate actual actual D C estimate estimate actual actual Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 42 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Maddening Measurements page 2 F E estimate estimate actual actual H G estimate estimate actual actual List the pairs of angles that are congruent. Explain the relationship between the measure of an angle and the length of the rays. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 43 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Maddening Measurements Answer Key Name A B estimate actual estimate 30° 90° actual D C estimate actual estimate 45° Grade 4 Angle Measurement actual Page 44 of 53 30° Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Maddening Measurements page 2 Answer Key F E estimate estimate 45° actual 120° actual H G estimate estimate 90° actual actual List the pairs of angles that are congruent. 90°, C and E are 45°, F and A and D are 30°, 120° B and G are H are 120° Explain the relationship between the measure of an angle and the length of the rays. There is no relationship between the angle measure and the length of the rays. The angle measure is determined by the rotation of the rays not the length. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 45 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Sum of the Angles in a Triangle Name B A C N L M Y Z X Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 46 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Sum of the Angles in a Triangle Answer Key B 98 41 41 A C N 64 90 L Z 26 M 18 90 Y 72 X Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 47 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Congruent Triangles Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 48 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Making Triangles Name Draw one straight line that connects any two opposite vertices of each quadrilateral below. A diagonal line must divide the quadrilateral into two triangles. Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 49 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Degrees in a Quadrilateral Name A B D C E F G H Q R T Grade 4 Angle Measurement S Page 50 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Degrees in a Quadrilateral Answer Key A 90 D 90 90 B 90 C E 108 108 G H Q 48 132 48 R 132 T Grade 4 Angle Measurement F 72 72 S Page 51 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Polygon Shapes Record Sheet Name Polygon Number of Sides Grade 4 Angle Measurement Measure of Interior Angle Page 52 of 53 Angle Sum Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Polygon Shapes Record Sheet Answer Key Polygon Number of Sides Measure of Interior Angle Angle Sum Triangle 3 60 180 Square 4 90 360 Pentagon 5 108 540 Hexagon 6 120 720 Grade 4 Angle Measurement Page 53 of 53 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Mathematics Model Curriculum Grade Level: Fourth Grade Grading Period: 4 Common Core Domain Time Range: 20 Days Geometry Common Core Standards Draw and identify lines and angles, and classify shapes by properties of their lines and angles. 1. Draw points, lines, line segments, rays, angles (right, acute, obtuse), and perpendicular and parallel lines. Identify these in two-dimensional figures. 2. Classify two-dimensional figures based on the presence or absence of parallel or perpendicular lines, or the presence or absence of angles of a specified size. Recognize right triangles as a category, and identify right triangles. 3. Recognize a line of symmetry for a two-dimensional figure as a line across the figure such that the figure can be folded along the line into matching parts. Identify line-symmetric figures and draw lines of symmetry. The description from the Common Core Standards Critical Area of Focus for Grade 4 says: Students describe, analyze, compare, and classify two-dimensional shapes. Through building, drawing, and analyzing two-dimensional shapes, students deepen their understanding of properties of two-dimensional objects and the use of them to solve problems involving symmetry. Content Elaborations This section will address the depth of the standards that are being taught. from ODE Model Curriculum Ohio has chosen to support shared interpretation of the standards by linking the work of multistate partnerships as the Mathematics Content Elaborations. Further clarification of the standards can be found through these reliable organizations and their links: Achieve the Core Modules, Resources Hunt Institute Video examples Institute for Mathematics and Education Learning Progressions Narratives Illustrative Mathematics Sample tasks National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics (NCSM) Resources, Lessons, Items National Council of Teacher of Mathematics (NCTM) Resources, Lessons, Items Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC) Resources, Items Expectations for Learning (Tasks and Assessments) Classroom tasks and assessments should be constructed in a way that challenges students to think and apply the information they are learning. Students should be able to summarize, analyze, organize, evaluate, predict, design, create, innovate, etc. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 1 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Mathematics Model Curriculum Expectations for Learning (in development) from ODE Model Curriculum Ohio has selected PARCC as the contractor for the development of the Next Generation Assessments for Mathematics. PARCC is responsible for the development of the framework, blueprints, items, rubrics, and scoring for the assessments. Further information can be found at Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC). Specific information is located at these links: Model Content Framework Item Specifications/Evidence Tables Sample Items Calculator Usage Accommodations Reference Sheets Sample assessment questions are included in this document. The following website has problem of the month problems and tasks that can be used to assess students and help guide your lessons. http://www.noycefdn.org/resources.php http://illustrativemathematics.org http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/itmrlsx/search.aspx http://nrich.maths.org At the end of this topic period students will demonstrate their understanding by…. Some examples include: Constructed Response Performance Tasks Portfolios ***A student’s nine week grade should be based on multiple academic criteria (classroom assignments and teacher made assessments). Instructional Strategies Columbus Curriculum Guide strategies for this topic are included in this document. Also utilize model curriculum, Ohiorc.org, textbooks, InfoOhio, etc. as resources to provide instructional strategies. Websites http://illuminations.nctm.org http://illustrativemathematics.org http://insidemathematics.org http://www.lessonresearch.net/lessonplans1.html Instructional Strategies from ODE Model Curriculum Angles Students can and should make geometric distinctions about angles without measuring or mentioning degrees. Angles should be classified in comparison to right angles, such as larger than, smaller than or the same size as a right angle. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 2 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Mathematics Model Curriculum Students can use the corner of a sheet of paper as a benchmark for a right angle. They can use a right angle to determine relationships of other angles. Symmetry When introducing line of symmetry, provide examples of geometric shapes with and without lines of symmetry. Shapes can be classified by the existence of lines of symmetry in sorting activities. This can be done informally by folding paper, tracing, creating designs with tiles or investigating reflections in mirrors. With the use of a dynamic geometric program, students can easily construct points, lines and geometric figures. They can also draw lines perpendicular or parallel to other line segments. Two-dimensional shapes Two-dimensional shapes are classified based on relationships by the angles and sides. Students can determine if the sides are parallel or perpendicular, and classify accordingly. Characteristics of rectangles (including squares) are used to develop the concept of parallel and perpendicular lines. The characteristics and understanding of parallel and perpendicular lines are used to draw rectangles. Repeated experiences in comparing and contrasting shapes enable students to gain a deeper understanding about shapes and their properties. Informal understanding of the characteristics of triangles is developed through angle measures and side length relationships. Triangles are named according to their angle measures (right, acute or obtuse) and side lengths (scalene, isosceles or equilateral). These characteristics are used to draw triangles. Instructional Resources/Tools from ODE Model Curriculum Mirrors Geoboards GeoGebra (a free software for learning and teaching); http://www.geogebra.com. Misconceptions/Challenges The following are some common misconceptions for this topic. As you teach the lessons, identify the misconceptions/challenges that students have with the concepts being taught. Common Misconceptions from ODE Model Curriculum Students believe a wide angle with short sides may seem smaller than a narrow angle with long sides. Students can compare two angles by tracing one and placing it over the other. Students will then realize that the length of the sides does not determine whether one angle is larger or smaller than another angle. The measure of the angle does not change. Please read the Teacher Introductions, included in this document, for further understanding. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 3 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Teacher Introduction Problem Solving The Common Core State Standards for Mathematical Practices focus on a mastery of mathematical thinking. Developing mathematical thinking through problem solving empowers teachers to learn about their students’ mathematical thinking. Students progressing through the Common Core curriculum have been learning intuitively, concretely, and abstractly while solving problems. This progression has allowed students to understand the relationships of numbers which are significantly different than the rote practice of memorizing facts. Procedures are powerful tools to have when solving problems, however if students only memorize the procedures, then they never develop an understanding of the relationships among numbers. Students need to develop fluency. However, teaching these relationships first, will allow students an opportunity to have a deeper understanding of mathematics. These practices are student behaviors and include: 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. Teaching the mathematical practices to build a mathematical community in your classroom is one of the major reforms in mathematics. The role of the teacher is to facilitate student thinking. These practices are not taught in isolation, but instead are connected to and woven throughout students’ work with the standards. Using open-ended problem solving in your classroom can teach to all of these practices. A problem-based approach to learning focuses on teaching for understanding. In a classroom with a problem-based approach, teaching of content is done THROUGH problem solving. Important math concepts and skills are embedded in the problems. Small group and whole class discussions give students opportunities to make connections between the explicit math skills and concepts from the standards. Open-ended problem solving helps students develop new strategies to solve problems that make sense to them. Misconceptions should be addressed by teachers and students while they discuss their strategies and solutions. When you begin using open-ended problem solving, you may want to choose problems from the Common Core Glossary, Table 2 (below) (multiplication and division situations) to pose to your students. Included are descriptions and examples of multiplication and division word problem structures. It is helpful to understand the type of structure that makes up a word problem. As a teacher, you can create word problems following the structures and also have students follow the structures to create word problems. This will deepen their understanding and give them important clues about ways they can solve a problem. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 4 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Table 2 includes word problem structures/situations for multiplication and division from www.corestandards.org Equal Groups Arrays, 4 Area, 5 Compare 3×6=? There are 3 bags with 6 plums in each bag. How many plums are there in all? Measurement example: You need 3 lengths of string, each 6 inches long. How much string will you need altogether? Measurement example: You have 18 inches of string, which you will cut into 3 equal pieces. How long will each piece of string be? There are 3 rows of apples with 6 apples in each row. How many apples are there? If 18 apples are arranged into 3 equal rows, how many apples will be in each row? If 18 apples are arranged into equal rows of 6 apples, how many rows will there be? Area example: What is the area of a 3 cm by 6 cm rectangle? Area example: A rectangle has an area of 18 square centimeters. If one side is 3 cm long, how long is a side next to it? A red hat costs $18 and that is 3 times as much as a blue hat costs. How much does a blue hat cost? Area example: A rectangle has an area of 18 square centimeters. If one side is 6 cm long, how long is a side next to it? Measurement example: A rubber band is stretched to be 18 cm long and that is 3 times as long as it was at first. How long was the rubber band at first? a × ? = p, and p ÷ a = ? Measurement example: A rubber band was 6 cm long at first. Now it is stretched to be 18 cm long. How many times as long is the rubber band now as it was at first? ? × b = p, and p ÷ b = ? A blue hat costs $6. A red hat costs 3 times as much as the blue hat. How much does the red hat cost? Measurement example: A rubber band is 6 cm long. How long will the rubber band be when it is stretched to be 3 times as long? General Number of Groups Unknown (“How many groups?” Division Group Size Unknown (“How many in each group?” Division) 3 × ? = 18, and 18 ÷ 3 = ? If 18 plums are shared equally into 3 bags, then how many plums will be in each bag? Unknown Product a×b=? ? × 6 = 18, and 18 ÷ 6 = ? If 18 plums are to be packed 6 to a bag, then how many bags are needed? Measurement example: You have 18 inches of string, which you will cut into pieces that are 6 inches long. How many pieces of string will you have? A red hat costs $18 and a blue hat costs $6. How many times as much does the red hat cost as the blue hat? The problem structures become more difficult as you move right and down through the table (i.e. an “Unknown Product-Equal Groups” problem is the easiest, while a “Number of Groups Unknown-Compare” problem is the most difficult). Discuss with students the problem structure/situation, what they know (e.g., groups and group size), and what they are solving for (e.g., product). The Common Core State Standards require students to solve each type of problem in the table throughout the school year. Included in this guide are many sample problems that could be used with your students. There are three categories of word problem structures/situations for multiplication and division: Unknown Product, Group Size Unknown and Number of Groups Unknown. There are three main ideas that the word structures include; equal groups or equal sized units of measure, arrays/areas and comparisons. All problem structures/situations can be represented using symbols and equations. Unknown Product: (a × b = ?) In this structure/situation you are given the number of groups and the size of each group. You are trying to determine the total items in all the groups. Grandma has 4 piles of her famous oatmeal cookies. There are 3 oatmeal cookies in each pile. How many cookies does Grandma have? Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 5 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Group Size Unknown: (a × ? = p and p ÷ a = ?) In this structure/situation you know how many equal groups and the total amount of items. You are trying to determine the size in each group. This is a partition situation. Grandma gives 12 cookies to 4 grandchildren and each grandchild is given the same number of cookies. How many cookies will each grandchild get? Number of Groups Unknown: (? × b = p and p ÷ b = ?) In this structure/situation you know the size in each group and the total amount of items is known. You are trying to determine the number of groups. This is a measurement situation. Grandma gave 12 cookies to some of her grandchildren. She gave each grandchild 3 cookies. How many grandchildren got cookies? Students should also be engaged in multi-step problems and logic problems (Reason abstractly and quantitatively). They should be looking for patterns and thinking critically about problem situations (Look for and make use of structure and Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning). Problems should be relevant to students and make a real-world connection whenever possible. The problems should require students to use 21st Century skills, including critical thinking, creativity/innovation, communication and collaboration (Model with mathematics). Technology will enhance the problem solving experience. Problem solving may look different from grade level to grade level, room to room and problem to problem. However, all open-ended problem solving has three main components. In each session, the teacher poses a problem, gives students the freedom to solve the problem (using math tools, drawing a picture, acting it out, etc.), and record their thinking. Finally, the students share their thinking and strategies (Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others). Component 1- Pose the problem Problems posed during the focus lesson lead to a discussion that focuses on a concept being taught. Once an open-ended problem is posed, students should solve the problem independently and/or in small groups. As the year progresses, some of the problems posed during the Math APSS part of the One-Hour Block of Math will take multiple days to solve (Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them). Students may solve the problem over one or more class sessions. The sharing and questioning may take place during a different class session. Component 2- Solve the problem During open-ended problems, students need to record their thinking. Students can record their thinking either formally using an ongoing math notebook or informally using white boards or thinking paper. Formal math notebooks allow you, parents, and students to see growth as the year progresses. Math notebooks also give students the opportunity to refer back to previous strategies when solving new problems. Teachers should provide opportunities for students to revise their solutions and explanations as other students share their thinking. Students’ written explanations should include their “work”. This could be equations, numbers, pictures, etc. If Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 6 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 students used math tools to solve the problem, they should include a picture to represent how the tools were used. Students’ writing should include an explanation of their strategy as well as justification or proof that their answer is reasonable and correct. Component 3- Share solutions, strategies and thinking After students have solved the problem, gather the class together as a whole to share students’ thinking. Ask one student or group to share their method of solving the problem while the rest of the class listens. Early in the school year, the teacher models for students how to ask clarifying questions and questions that require the student(s) presenting to justify the use of their strategy. As the year progresses, students should ask the majority of questions during the sharing of strategies and solutions. Possible questions the students could ask include “Why did you solve the problem that way?” or “How do you know your answer is correct?” or “Why should I use your strategy the next time I solve a similar problem?” When that student or group is finished, ask another student in the class to explain in his/her own words what they think the student did to solve the problem. Ask students if the problem could be solved in a different way and encourage them to share their solution. You could also “randomly” pick a student or group who used a strategy you want the class to understand. Calling on students who used a good strategy but did not arrive at the correct answer also leads to rich mathematical discussions and gives students the opportunity to “critique the reasoning of others”. This highlights that the answer is not the most important part of open-ended problem solving and that it’s alright to take risks and make mistakes. At the end of each session, the mathematical thinking should be made explicit for students so they fully understand the strategies and solutions of the problem. Misconceptions should be addressed. As students share their strategies, you may want to give the strategies names and post them in the room. When you give the strategy a name (i.e., “What Thomas did is called the ‘Guess and Check’ strategy.”) it helps students to write and discuss their work more precisely. Add to the list as strategies come up during student sharing rather than starting the year with a whole list posted. This keeps students from assuming the strategies on a pre-printed list are the ONLY strategies that can be used. Possible strategies students may use include: Act It Out Make a Table Find a Pattern Guess and Check Make a List Draw a Picture When you use open-ended problem solving in your mathematics instruction, students should have access to a variety of problem solving “math tools” to use as they find solutions to problems. Several types of math tools can be combined into one container that is placed on the table so that students have a choice as they solve each problem, or math tools can be located in a part of the classroom where students have easy access to them. Remember that math tools, such as place value blocks or color tiles, do not teach a concept, but are used to represent a concept. Therefore, students may select math tools to represent an idea or relationship for which that tool is not typically used (e.g., ten bears may be used to represent a group of 10 rather than selecting a rod or ten individual cubes). Some examples of math tools may include: one inch color tiles, centimeter cubes, Unifix® or snap cubes, two-color counters, and frog, bear or other type of animal counters. Students should also have access to a hundred chart and a number line. Problem solving can occur in a variety of settings in classrooms. Students may sit in pairs or small student groups using math tools to solve a problem while recording their thinking on Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 7 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 whiteboards. Students could solve a problem using role playing or SMART Board manipulatives to act it out. Occasionally whole group thinking with the teacher modeling how to record strategies can be useful. These whole group recordings can be kept in a class problem solving book. As students have more experience solving problems they should become more refined in their use of tools. The first several weeks of open-ended problem solving can be a daunting and overwhelming experience. A routine needs to be established so that students understand the expectations during problem solving time. Initially, the sessions can seem loud and disorganized while students become accustomed to the math tools and the problem solving process. Students become more familiar with the routine as the year progresses, so don’t abandon the process if it doesn’t run smoothly the first few times you try. The more regularly you engage students in open-ended problem solving, the more organized the sessions become. The benefits and rewards of using a problem-based approach to teaching and learning mathematics far outweigh the initial confusion of this approach. Using the open-ended problem solving approach helps our students to grow as problem solvers and critical thinkers. Engaging your students in this process frequently will prepare them for success as 21st Century learners. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 8 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Teacher Introduction Geometry The purpose of the Teacher Introductions is to build content knowledge for teachers. Having depth of knowledge for the Geometry domain is helpful when assessing student work and student thinking. This information could be used to guide classroom discussions, understand student misconceptions and provide differentiation opportunities. The focus of instruction is the Common Core Mathematics Standards. Geometry surrounds us in our daily lives. Everywhere we look we are bombarded by geometric images. Geometry is the study of the properties and relationships among points, lines, angles, surfaces, and solids. The study of geometry builds interest in mathematics for many types of learners. Geometry appeals to artistic and spatial learners, as well as engaging all students. Sound geometry instruction provides opportunities for hands-on and exploratory experiences with shapes in as many different forms as possible. Multiple and varied geometric experiences will develop spatial reasoning and problem-solving skills. Students build upon the foundation built in the primary grades and begin to use a standard geometric vocabulary to solve and analyze problems. Students expand their geometric knowledge to include angles, coordinate systems, and geometric models. Students identify, describe, and model points, planes, and intersecting, parallel, and perpendicular lines and line segments. In addition, students will be expected to describe, classify, compare, and model twoand three-dimensional objects using their attributes. Students will also identify and define triangles based on angle measures and side lengths. Points, Lines, and Planes An understanding of points, lines, and planes is the foundation to understanding and communicating geometric ideas. They help us draw pictures, make maps, and build objects. Points are places in space that can be described by a location. The intersection of two lines happens at a point. A point has no length or width. A line is a straight path of points that has no endpoints. It goes on forever in both directions which is indicated by the arrows at either end of the line. Lines are named by marking two points along the line with letters, although a single letter can also be used to name them. A line segment is a part of a line that is measured by two endpoints. The line segment includes all the points between those endpoints. A ray is a part of a line that includes one endpoint and all the points on the line that go in one direction from that endpoint. Lines, line segments, and rays have length but no width. An example of a point, a line, a line segment, and a ray with the symbols representing each are included in the following chart. Name Example Say Symbol point M point M point M b line Grade 4 Lines and Angles J K line J K, line K J, or line b Page 9 of 63 JK KJ b Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Name line segment Example A ray Say C L M Symbol line segment AC ray LM AC CA LM Planes are flat surfaces that are infinitely wide and long without depth. Two-dimensional figures are referred to as plane figures because they have length and width, but no depth. Lines, line segments, and rays are referred to as one-dimensional figures because they have length but no width or depth. There are an infinite number of points and lines in a plane. Planes can intersect each other or be parallel to each other. A line is formed when planes intersect each other. Types of Lines Students will also be expected to describe and identify different types of lines and line segments in the environment. Recognition of the different types of lines is also embedded within the discussions of the characteristics of two- and three-dimensional shapes. The following table discusses characteristics of different lines. Type of Line Description Parallel Parallel lines never touch one another because they are always the same distance apart. Intersecting Intersecting lines cross over one another. Perpendicular lines are intersecting lines, but not all intersecting lines are perpendicular. Perpendicular Perpendicular lines form a right angle (90°) where they meet, or intersect. A corner of a page can fit in a right angle. Skew A B C D Grade 4 Lines and Angles Skew lines are lines that are neither parallel nor intersecting because they do not lie in the same plane. In the mobile shown at the left, AB and CD are not parallel and they will never intersect because they are not in the same plane. Another example is a bookcase. The top of a bookcase, the bottom of a bookcase, and the shelves of a bookcase are all in different planes, therefore they will never intersect. Page 10 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Two-Dimensional Figures Students will describe, classify, compare, and model two- and three-dimensional objects using their attributes. Students have to develop a common mathematical vocabulary to describe characteristics and properties of different figures. Figure Circle Square Triangle Characteristics and/or Properties A circle is a plane figure with all points the same distance from the center. It has infinite lines of symmetry. A circle is not a polygon because it is not formed by line segments. A square is a quadrilateral (four-sided figure) with four right angles and four equal sides. A square can also be classified as a parallelogram, a rectangle, and/or a rhombus. A triangle is a three-sided polygon with three angles. Triangles can have different names based on the length of sides and/or the size of the angles. The number of lines of symmetry depends on the type of triangle. Hexagon A hexagon is a six-sided polygon with six angles. A regular hexagon has six lines of symmetry. Trapezoid Parallelogram Rectangle Rhombus Grade 4 Lines and Angles A trapezoid is a quadrilateral (four-sided figure) with exactly one pair of parallel lines. A trapezoid may or may not have one line of symmetry depending upon its shape. A parallelogram is a quadrilateral (four-sided figure) that has two pairs of sides that are parallel and the same length (congruent). Unless the parallelogram is a rhombus or a square (all four sides the same) there are no lines of symmetry. A rectangle is a parallelogram with four right angles. A rectangle has two pairs of sides that are parallel and congruent, but not all four sides are the same length. A rectangle has two lines of symmetry. A rhombus is a parallelogram with all four sides equal in length. A rhombus with four right angles is called a square. All other rhombi do not have right angles. A rhombus has two lines of symmetry. Page 11 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Figure Characteristics and/or Properties Ellipse An ellipse is an oval. An ellipse has two lines of symmetry. Pentagon A pentagon is a five-sided figure. A regular pentagon has five lines of symmetry. Triangles Students will extend their understanding of triangles to identify and define triangles based on angle measures and side lengths. Students must have experiences with different types of triangles in order to be able to develop the notion that lines of symmetry, congruence, and similarity can vary between different types of triangles. Triangles can be defined and classified by angle measures. Triangles Classified by Angle Measures Type of Triangle Equiangular Right Characteristics An equiangular triangle has three angles of the same measure (60 ). If a triangle is equiangular, it is also equilateral. A right triangle has one right angle (90 ). A right triangle has one line of symmetry if it is also an isosceles triangle, Acute An acute triangle has no angles measuring 90 or greater. Obtuse An obtuse triangle has one obtuse angle. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 12 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Triangles can also be defined and classified by side lengths. Triangles Classified By Side Lengths Type of Triangle Equilateral Characteristics An equilateral triangle is a triangle that has three sides of equal length. Equilateral triangles are also equiangular (all angles have the same measure). Equilateral triangles have three lines of symmetry. All equilateral triangles are similar to each other because an equilateral triangle is a regular figure. Isosceles An isosceles triangle is a triangle that has two sides of equal length. An isosceles triangle has one line of symmetry. Scalene A scalene triangle is a triangle that has three sides of different lengths. It has no lines of symmetry. All triangles can be classified and described by two names using the angle measures and the side lengths. However, equilateral triangles can only be named as equiangular because the angles must all be equal. An equilateral triangle cannot be named as a right or an obtuse triangle, as triangles cannot be made with three right angles or three angles greater than 90°. Example: Describe the triangle below using angle measures and side lengths. Answer: The triangle can be described as isosceles and right. Two of the sides are congruent (isosceles triangle). One angle is a right angle (right triangle). Example: Describe the triangle below using angle measures and side lengths. Answer: The triangle can be described as an obtuse scalene triangle. It has one obtuse angle (obtuse triangle) and all three sides are different lengths (scalene triangle). Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 13 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Quadrilaterals A quadrilateral is a four-sided figure. Students will explore different kinds of quadrilaterals and identify similarities and differences among them, recognizing that some quadrilaterals can be named in more than one way based on their characteristics. The table below lists different quadrilaterals and their characteristics. Type of Quadrilateral Characteristics rectangle A rectangle has two pairs of congruent parallel sides and four right angles. A rectangle is also a parallelogram. square A square has four congruent sides and four right angles. A square is also a rectangle, a parallelogram, and a rhombus. parallelogram A parallelogram has two pairs of congruent parallel sides. Opposite angles are congruent, but they are not right angles. rhombus A rhombus has four congruent sides. Opposite angles are congruent, but they are not right angles. A rhombus is also a parallelogram. trapezoid A trapezoid is a quadrilateral with exactly one pair of parallel sides. Some quadrilaterals may be named and/or described with different names based on their characteristics. For example, a square can also be named as a rectangle, a parallelogram, and a rhombus. A rhombus and rectangle are parallelograms. In addition, some quadrilaterals may share certain characteristics with other quadrilaterals, but can never be described as others. For example, a rhombus can also be a square, but it can never be a trapezoid, as trapezoids have exactly one pair of parallel sides. Since a trapezoid has only one pair of parallel lines, the only other name that can be used to classify it is quadrilateral. There are many other four sided figures that do not have parallel sides and therefore are not given special names. They are just classified as quadrilaterals. The figures below are examples. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 14 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS How are these two shapes alike? A. They both have four right angles. B. They both have perpendicular lines. C. They both have two pairs of parallel sides. D. They both have four angles that are congruent. Which pattern block piece has right angles? orange square yellow hexagon A. orange square B. yellow hexagon C. blue rhombus D. green triangle Grade 4 Lines and Angles blue rhombus Page 15 of 63 green triangle Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Answers/Rubrics How are these two shapes alike? A. They both have four right angles. B. They both have perpendicular lines. C. They both have two pairs of parallel sides. D. They both have four angles that are congruent. Answer: C Which pattern block piece has right angles? orange square yellow hexagon A. orange square B. yellow hexagon C. blue rhombus D. green triangle blue rhombus green triangle Answer: A Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 16 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Draw a polygon. Label the interior with Point A and Point C. Label the exterior with Point B. Compare the sides and angles of the two quadrilaterals below. Describe two ways that these quadrilaterals are different. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 17 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Answers/Rubrics Draw a polygon. Label the interior with Point A and Point C. Label the exterior with Point B. A 2-point response includes a polygon and points drawn so that Point A and Point C are inside the polygon and Point B is outside the polygon. For example: A B C A 1-point response includes a drawing of a polygon and points, but the points do not meet the requirements in the problem or includes a drawing of a shape that is a closed figure, but not a polygon, with points drawn so that Point A and Point C are inside the figure and point B is outside the figure. A 0-point response shows no mathematical understanding of the task. Compare the sides and angles of the two quadrilaterals below. Describe two ways that these quadrilaterals are different. Answer: Differences given by students will vary. Accept reasonable differences that are related to the sides and the angles of these quadrilaterals. A 2-point response includes two differences between the figures that are related to the angles and the sides (e.g., the rectangle has four 90 angles and the trapezoid has two angles that are less than 90 and two angles that are greater than 90 ; the rectangle has both sets of opposite sides parallel and the trapezoid has only one set of opposite sides parallel, etc.). A 1-point response includes only one difference between the figures or includes two or more ways that the quadrilaterals are the same. A 0-point response indicates no understanding of this task. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 18 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Draw a figure that has two pairs of parallel lines, four congruent sides, four vertices, and four right angles. What is the name of this figure? Underline all the characteristics that tell how the figures are alike. 1. They are all made up of line segments. 2. They all contain right angles. 3. They have at least two sides equal in length. 4. They all have parallel lines. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 19 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Answers/Rubrics Draw a figure that has two pairs of parallel lines, four congruent sides, four vertices, and four right angles. What is the name of this figure? A 2-point response draws a square and identifies the polygon as a square. A 1-point response either draws a square or states that it would be a square. A 0-point response shows no mathematical understanding of the task. Underline all the characteristics that tell how the figures are alike. 4. They are all made up of line segments. 5. They all contain right angles. 6. They have at least two sides equal in length. 4. They all have parallel lines. Answer: 1. They are all made up of line segments. 2. They all contain right angles. 3. They have at least two sides equal in length. 4. They all have parallel lines. A 2-point response correctly selects choices 1 and 3. A 1-point response selects one of the correct answers. A 0-point response indicates no understanding of the task. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 20 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Describe how Figure A is more like Figure B than Figure C? A B C Which letter contains a set of parallel lines? A, T, H, or K A. the letter A B. the letter T C. the letter H D. the letter K Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 21 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Answers/Rubrics Describe how Figure A is more like Figure B than Figure C? A B C Answer: Figure A and Figure B are similar because they have sides that are perpendicular, all angles are right angles, and opposite sides are parallel. A 2-point response includes a complete description of how Figure A and Figure B are more alike than Figure C. A 1-point response has a weak description of how the figures are similar. A 0-point response shows no mathematical understanding of this task. Which letter contains a set of parallel lines? A, T, H, or K A. the letter A B. the letter T C. the letter H D. the letter K Answer: C Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 22 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Which lines are perpendicular lines? A B C D A. Lines A and C B. Lines B and A C. Lines C and D D. There are no perpendicular lines. Use the Venn diagram to sort the following figures. Parallel Grade 4 Lines and Angles Perpendicular Page 23 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Answers/Rubrics Which lines are perpendicular lines? A B C D A. Lines A and C B. Lines B and A C. Lines C and D D. There are no perpendicular lines. Answer: A Use the Venn diagram to sort the following figures. Answer: Parallel Perpendicular A 2-point response correctly sorts all the shapes. A 1-point response makes an error in sorting one of the shapes by the given attributes. A 0-point response has no mathematical understanding of this task. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 24 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS The map below shows some of the streets in German Village. City Park Ave. High Street Whittier Street Stewart Avenue Reinhard Avenue Schiller Park Bike Path Name a pair of streets that are intersecting. __________________________________ and _______________________________ Name a pair of streets that are parallel. _________________________________ and _________________________________ Name a pair of streets that are perpendicular. _________________________________ and __________________________________ On the map above label a right angle with an R, an acute angle with an A, and an obtuse angle with an O. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 25 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Answers/Rubrics The map below shows some of the streets in German Village. City Park Ave. High Street Whittier Street Reinhard Avenue Stewart Avenue Schiller Park Bike Path Name a pair of streets that are intersecting. __________________________________ and _______________________________ Name a pair of streets that are parallel. _________________________________ and _________________________________ Name a pair of streets that are perpendicular. _________________________________ and __________________________________ On the map above label a right angle with an R, an acute angle with an A, and an obtuse angle with an O. A 4-point response includes correct answers for all parts of the problem. A 3-point response includes an error in one part of the response. A 2-point response does not address all parts of the response (e.g., names all of the streets correctly but does not label the angles). A 1-point response includes correct answers for at least two parts of the problem. A 0-point response includes a correct answer for one part of the problem or shows no mathematical understanding of the task. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 26 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 TEACHING STRATEGIES/ACTIVITIES Vocabulary: : polygon, point, line, plane, two-dimensional, intersecting, parallel, perpendicular, line segments, ray, quadrilateral, angle, equiangular, right, acute, obtuse, isosceles, equilateral, scalene, interior, exterior, congruent, symmetry, similar 1. The word problems below can be presented to students in a variety of ways. Some options include: using the questions to create a choice-board, Math-O board, one problem per class session, one problem each evening for homework, partner work or as an assessment question. The strength of problem solving lies in the rich discussion afterward. As the school year progresses students should be able to justify their own thinking as well as the thinking of others. This can be done through comparing strategies, arguing another student’s solution strategy or summarizing another student’s sharing. Sort the polygons into a Venn Diagram. Label the right side of your Venn “At least one set of parallel lines.” Label the left side of your Venn “At least one right angle.” Explain why you sorted the polygons as you did. The city is planning to extend a new road through Frieda’s neighborhood. If the new road extension will intersect Home Avenue at a right angle, which road could they be extending? Home Ave. Safe St. Cross Rd. Main St. Broad St. Dante was sketching the following polygons. He was having difficulty completing one of them. Which polygon do you think Dante had trouble sketching and why? 1) an isosceles right triangle 2) a rectangle that is not a parallelogram 3) a parallelogram with exactly one right angle On the clock face, draw hands to show 1:45. Draw a second hand in your clock that will divide the 45 minute section into one acute and one obtuse angle. Label your angles. How many of each type of angle are now on the entire clock? Amber drew a polygon with one pair of parallel sides and 2 right angles. What shape best describes the polygon that Amber drew? Draw the polygon. Draw a map of what Tune Town could look like. A) Piano, Trumpet, and Horn Streets are all parallel. B) Treble Lane is perpendicular to Piano, and ends at Horn St. C) Drum Rd. is intersects Horn, but not at a right angle. Greta drew a horizontal line through the center of the figure below to show a line of symmetry. Clark drew a vertical line through the center to show a line of symmetry. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 27 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Which student has done it correctly? Why? Draw all the lines of symmetry through each of the regular polygons below. What pattern do you see? How many lines of symmetry do you think a regular polygon with 9 sides will have? 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. I cut a shape along a line of symmetry. I noticed my new shape had its own line of symmetry. What could my original shape have looked like? CLYDE says that his name, when spelled with capital letters, has a total of 2 lines of symmetry. Is he right? List the lines of symmetry you can find in the name CLYDE. https://www.georgiastandards.org/Common-Core/Pages/Math-K-5.aspx Go to the above web page, open grade 4 on the right side of the page. Open “Unit 6 Framework Student Edition.” These tasks are from the Georgia Department of Education. The tasks build on one another. You may or may not use all of the tasks. There are four different types of tasks. Scaffolding tasks build up to the constructing tasks which develop a deep understanding of the concept. Next, there are practice tasks and finally performance tasks which are a summative assessment for the unit. Select the tasks that best fit with your lessons and the standards being taught at that time. Give each pair of students a geoboard, rubber bands, and a blank index card. Tell students to make three or four different triangles on their geoboard. Students use the index card as a “right angle tester”. Show students how to use one corner of the card to determine if their triangles have right angles (90°), acute angles (less than 90°), and/or obtuse angles (greater than 90° but less than 180°). Instruct students to draw sketches of their triangles in their math journal and identify each angle as right, acute, or obtuse. Ask students the following questions: Is it possible for a triangle to have two right angles? Can all of the angles be obtuse? Can all of the angles be acute? Does the size of the triangle affect the size of the angles? (i.e., does a “big” triangle have obtuse angles, while a “small” triangle has acute angles?) Have a student that has an example of a triangle with a right angle come up and draw it on the overhead. Discuss its characteristics (a right triangle has one angle that is a right angle). Continue with a triangle with an obtuse angle and discuss its characteristics (an obtuse triangle has one obtuse angle and two acute angles) and the characteristics of a triangle with all acute angles (an equilateral triangle has all acute angles with the same measure of 60 ). Distribute “Identify the Angles” (included in this Curriculum Guide). Using the shapes found on the lab sheet, students will decide if each shape has right angles, acute angles, and/or obtuse angles, and how many of each type of angle. Give each pair of students a bag that has one of each pattern block shape in it (i.e., a yellow hexagon, a red trapezoid, a green triangle, an orange square, a blue rhombus, and a tan rhombus). Students take the shapes out of the bag and put them on the desk in front of them. Give students clues about the characteristics of the shapes. Students hold up the shape they think is being described. Find the shape that has two pairs of parallel lines, four equal sides, and four right angles (orange square). Find the shape that has three equal sides and three equal angles (green triangle). Find the shape that has one pair of parallel lines and a pair of sides that are equal in length (red trapezoid). Find the shape that has two pairs of parallel lines and four sides equal in length, but no right angles (blue or tan rhombus). Find the shape that has three pairs of parallel lines and all sides are equal (yellow hexagon). Distribute “Dot Paper” (included in the Grids and Graphics section of this Curriculum Guide) and “Isometric Dot Paper” (included in this Curriculum Guide). Instruct students to draw a right triangle and an obtuse triangle on each sheet. Review the characteristics of each triangle and quickly check each student’s triangles. Next instruct students to draw an Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 28 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 equilateral triangle (a triangle that has three equal sides). Which sheet of paper will you have to use to make an equal sided triangle? (Dot Paper-Isometric) Explain that you cannot use Dot Paper to make an equal sided triangle because one side will always be longer than the other two sides. Ask students to look at all of the angles. What do they notice about the three angles? (they are all acute, the angles all have measures of 60 ) Discuss that this triangle also has another special name; equiangular. Explain to students that there is another triangle that is like the equiangular triangle because it has three acute angles but the three angles do not have to be equal. This is called an acute triangle. Distribute Dot Paper and have students draw examples of acute triangles. 7. Explain to students that they are going to help sort some triangles into three groups. Prior to this activity, create a chart that is divided into three columns. At the top of the columns draw a picture of an isosceles triangle, a scalene triangle, and an equilateral triangle. Also cut out the “Triangle Cards” (included in this Curriculum Guide). Distribute the cards to students. Have students come up one at a time to categorize their triangle under a column. If a student makes a mistake, continue categorizing triangles. At the end, ask students if they think all the triangles are in the correct columns. If students want to move triangles, they need to provide their reasoning. After all triangles are correctly placed, make a list of the characteristics of each group of triangles. Lead students into writing a description for each triangle column. Have students write the description and draw the triangles in their math journals. Explain to students that all three of these triangles have special names: isosceles (two sides are the same length), scalene (no side is the same length), and equilateral (all sides are the same length). Have students label the triangles in their journals. 8. Give each pair of students a supply of toothpicks and miniature marshmallows (leave the bag open for a few hours so they are not so soft). Tell students to make specific twodimensional shapes (triangle, square, rectangle, pentagon, etc.) by sticking the ends of the toothpicks into the marshmallows. Discuss the characteristics of each shape (number of sides and vertices, length of sides, etc.). 9. Distribute “Shape Match” (included in this Curriculum Guide) to pairs of students. Students cut apart the cards and make two groups, cards with shapes and cards with characteristics. Have students shuffle each group of cards so the order is mixed up. Students work in pairs or small groups to match a characteristic (property) card with the appropriate shape card. 10. Read A Cloak For The Dreamer by Aileen Friedman. Divide students into pairs. Give each pair of students pattern blocks and a piece of drawing paper. Pairs create as many new shapes as possible that are a combination of the pattern block shapes. The blocks are traced on the drawing paper to show the new shape and then the name and characteristics of the new shape are written under that tracing. Use an Ellison® machine or cut out paper shapes using the “Shape Templates” (included in this Curriculum Guide) so that each student has two copies of the following shapes: a square, a rectangle, a trapezoid, an equilateral triangle, a rhombus, and a circle. Divide three pieces of chart paper in half to create six columns. Glue a different shape at the top of each column and draw a line under the shapes. Divide the rest of the column in half by drawing a line so that halves and fourths of shapes can be shown on the chart (See sample). Square Circle 1 2 1 4 Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 29 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Display the charts at the front of the class. Discuss congruence and symmetry and model these concepts for the class using one or more of the paper shapes. Explain that each figure is going to be folded into halves along a line of symmetry and also into fourths along another line of symmetry if possible. The new shapes made by folding will then be compared and contrasted with the original shape from which they were created. Using one shape ask the students to fold it in half along a line of symmetry. Ask for a volunteer to come to the front of the room and compare the new shape with the original one. Write a couple of words to describe the new shape and glue or tape it in the appropriate place on the chart. Ask if anyone else folded the shape in half a different way. Continue asking students to compare new shapes and glue them on the chart until all of the possible new shapes have been shared. Next, ask students to take the other copy of the same shape and see if it can be divided into fourths. Have students share their new shapes and glue them to the chart. Write statements on the chart comparing and contrasting the shapes created. Repeat the same process until all six of the shapes have been discussed. Cut many of the six shapes above from different colors of construction paper (an Ellison® machine works well to cut the shapes). If construction paper shapes are not possible, this activity could be completed using pattern blocks and attribute blocks. Place the shapes on a table where they are accessible to the entire class. Divide students into groups of three or four. Ask each group to sketch a design for a cloak using any combination of the six shapes used to create the charts. Have one member of the group go to the table and select the construction paper shapes needed, based on the group plan, to create the cloak. Give each group a piece of white drawing paper and have them glue the construction paper shapes on the paper to create their final cloak. Ask students to discuss the characteristics of the figures that they included in their cloak and to describe any patterns that they used. Explain to the class that when figures can cover an area with no gaps and no overlaps it is called a tessellation. Display the cloaks. 11. Divide the class into six groups with four to five students in each group. Cut out and make six sets of “Where Is That Figure?” (included in this Curriculum Guide). Students match the characteristic card with the correct shape or line card and name card. Each shape or line card should be matched with one characteristic card and the corresponding name card. Students may need to readjust cards that have already matched so that all cards will have a match at the end of the activity. 12. Two different sets of “Shape Cards” (included in this Curriculum Guide), one with letters on the shapes and another with numbers are provided. Both sets can be used together for a Daily Sign In activity or this activity can be done twice with different sets of cards. The sets can also be used together to find congruent and similar shapes between the two sets of cards. Make a transparency of one sheet of the shape cards. Review the terms interior and exterior. Put a point outside of the shape and ask the students whether it is on the interior or the exterior of the shape. Then put a point on the interior of the shape and ask the same question. Finally, put a point on the line that forms the perimeter of the shape and ask whether that point is on the interior or the exterior (it is neither because it lies on the line that forms the perimeter of the shape). Ask a volunteer to come to the front and point to all of the interior angles of the first shape. Show the students that the shape also has exterior angles. Using an index card determine whether the interior angles are acute, obtuse, or right. Divide students into groups of four. Give each group a set of “Shape Cards” (included in this Curriculum Guide) and each student a ruler, a pair of scissors, and an index card (to use as a right angle benchmark). Ask the group to work together to cut out the shape cards. Students then equally divide the shapes among the group. Each student first looks at all of the interior angles of the six shapes they have been given using the corner of the index card as the benchmark for a right angle. Students write A(acute) in angles that are less than a right Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 30 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 angle, R(right) in right angles, and O(obtuse) in angles that are more than right angles but less than straight angles. See sample: A A TO A 13. Students then measure the sides of the shape to determine if they are equal or different and look to see if opposite sides are parallel. Finally, students determine how many lines of symmetry the shape has and draw them on the shape. Distribute the “Shape Sorting Record Sheet” (included in this Curriculum Guide) to each student and have students work as a group to divide the shapes into the given categories doing one sort at a time. Once the group agrees that the sort is correct, each student records the letters of the shapes under the appropriate column headings on his or her record sheet. If a shape fits in both given categories, then the letter is placed only under the Both column. Letters of shapes that do not fit in any category of the sort are listed on the Other Shapes line under the table. As a class, discuss the placement of the shapes and any differences that groups have on their record sheets. Distribute the “Venn Diagram” graphic (included in this Curriculum Guide) and have students complete the sort using the Venn diagram either before putting the letters on the record sheet or to check the completed record sheets. Large circles can also be created for the Venn diagram by connecting several pipe cleaners to create the circles or by drawing an empty Venn diagram template on chart paper. 14. Review the terms parallel, perpendicular, and intersecting. Give each student a geoboard and two rubber bands. Orally give students clues from “Geoboard Shapes” (included in this Curriculum Guide) that tell them what shapes to create on the geoboard. After each set of clues is given, have students hold up their geoboards. Ask students to look around the room and verify that all of the shapes they see have been made following the clues. If students have different shapes, ask them justify that their figure followed the given set of clues. 15. Give each student a copy of the “Letters” page and the “Venn Diagram” (included in this Curriculum Guide). Students sort the letters into the categories given on the Venn diagram, those letters that have only parallel lines, only intersecting lines, both intersecting and parallel lines, and those that have neither. Before students begin, remind them that lines and line segments are straight and not curved. This should help them correctly place all of the letters with curved lines outside both of the circles. Share the sort as a group and have students justify their placement of letters. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 31 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 RESOURCES Textbook: Mathematics, Scott Foresman-Addison Wesley (2004): pp. 438-439, 440-443, 444- 447, 456-457 Supplemental: Mathematics, Scott Foresman-Addison Wesley (2004): Enrichment Master pp. 99, 102 Practice Master pp. 97, 99, 102 Problem Solving Master pp. 97, 99, 102 Reteaching Master pp. 97, 99, 102 INTERDISCIPLINARY CONNECTIONS 1. Literature Connections: A Cloak for the Dreamer by Aileen Friedman The Greedy Triangle by Marilyn Burns Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 32 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving Questions Sort the polygons into a Venn Diagram. Label the right side of your Venn “At least one set of parallel lines.” Label the left side of your Venn “At least one right angle.” Explain why you sorted the polygons as you did. The city is planning to extend a new road through Frieda’s neighborhood. If the new road extension will intersect Home Avenue at a right angle, which road could they be extending? Home Ave. Safe St. Cross Rd. Main St. Broad St. Dante was sketching the following polygons. He was having difficulty completing one of them. Which polygon do you think Dante had trouble sketching and why? 1) an isosceles right triangle 2) a rectangle that is not a parallelogram 3) a parallelogram with exactly one right angle On the clock face, draw hands to show 1:45. Draw a second hand in your clock that will divide the 45 minute section into one acute and one obtuse angle. Label your angles. How many of each type of angle are now on the entire clock? Amber drew a polygon with one pair of parallel sides and 2 right angles. What shape best describes the polygon that Amber drew? Draw the polygon. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 33 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving Questions Draw a map of what Tune Town could look like. Answer Key A) Piano, Trumpet, and Horn Streets are all parallel. B) Treble Lane is perpendicular to Piano, and ends at Horn St. C) Drum Rd. is intersects Horn, but not at a right angle. Greta drew a horizontal line through the center of the figure below to show a line of symmetry. Clark drew a vertical line through the center to show a line of symmetry. Which student has done it correctly? Why? Draw all the lines of symmetry through each of the regular polygons below. What pattern do you see? How many lines of symmetry do you think a regular polygon with 9 sides will have? I cut a shape along a line of symmetry. I noticed my new shape had its own line of symmetry. What could my original shape have looked like? CLYDE says that his name, when spelled with capital letters, has a total of 2 lines of symmetry. Is he right? List the lines of symmetry you can find in the name CLYDE. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 34 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving Questions Answers Sort theall polygons a Venn Diagram. thethe right side polygons of your Venn “AtWhat least one set of Draw the linesinto of symmetry through Label each of regular below. pattern do parallel lines.” Label the left side of your Venn “At least one right angle.” Explain why you sorted the you see? How many lines of symmetry do you think a regular polygon with 9 sides will have? polygons as you did. At least one At least one set of right angle parallel lines Answer: The city is planning to extend a new road through Frieda’s neighborhood. If the new road extension will intersect Home Avenue at a right angle, which road could they be extending? Home Ave. Safe St. Main St. Cross Rd Broad St. Answer: They will extend Broad St because it is perpendicular to Home. Dante was sketching the following polygons. He was having difficulty completing one of them. Which polygon do you think Dante had trouble sketching and why? 1) an isosceles right triangle 2) a rectangle that is not a parallelogram 3) a parallelogram with exactly one right angle Answer: Dante could not sketch a rectangle that is not a parallelogram. Because they have two sets of parallel lines, all rectangles are parallelograms. On the clock face, draw hands to show 1:45. Draw a second hand in your clock that will divide the 45 minute section into one acute and one obtuse angle. Label your angles. How many of each type of each angle are now on the entire clock? Answers will vary. 2 obtuse and 1 acute angle obtuse are now on the clock. Possible answer: acute obtuse Amber drew a polygon with one pair of parallel sides and 2 right angles. What shape best describes the polygon that Amber drew? Draw the polygon. Answers will vary. The shape that best describes the polygon is a trapezoid. (Discuss with students the difference and similarity of this trapezoid and the trapezoid students are more familiar with that is in the pattern block set. Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 35 of 63 ) Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving Questions Answers Draw a map of what Tune Town could look like. A) Piano, Trumpet, and Horn Streets are all parallel. B) Treble Lane is perpendicular to Piano, and ends at Horn St. C) Drum Rd. is intersects Horn, but not at a right angle. Answers will vary, but maps should demonstrate that students understand the terms parallel, perpendicular, intersect, and right angle. Greta drew a horizontal line through the center of the figure below to show a line of symmetry. Clark drew a vertical line through the center to show a line of symmetry. Which student has done it correctly? Why? Answer: Clark has drawn the line of symmetry correctly because with a vertical line through the center, each side is a mirror image. Draw all the lines of symmetry through each of the regular polygons below. What pattern do you see? How many lines of symmetry do you think a regular polygon with 9 sides will have? Answer: The number of lines of symmetry equals the number of sides in a regular polygon with an odd number of sides. Each line of symmetry extends from one vertex to the midpoint of the opposite side. A regular polygon with nine sides will have 9 lines of symmetry. I cut a shape along a line of symmetry. I noticed my new shape had its own line of symmetry. What could my original shape have looked like? Answers will vary. Circles, rectangles, squares will work. Hearts, trapezoids, etc. will not. CLYDE says that his name, when spelled with capital letters, has a total of 3 lines of symmetry. Is he right? List the lines of symmetry you can find in the name CLYDE. Answer: Clyde’s name has four lines of symmetry: 1) horizontally through the C 2) vertically through the Y 3) horizontally through the D 4) horizontally through the E Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 36 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Identify the Angles Name Look at each of the shapes below. Fill in the number of each type of angle that is on the inside (interior) of each shape. Shape Grade 4 Lines and Angles Right Angles Acute Angles Page 37 of 63 Obtuse Angles Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Identify the Angles Answer Key Name Look at each of the shapes below. Fill in the number of each type of angle that is on the inside (interior) of each shape. Shape Right Angles Acute Angles 1 2 Obtuse Angles 6 5 2 2 2 2 1 1 4 2 Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 38 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Isometric Dot Paper Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 39 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Triangle Cards Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 40 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Shape Match Grade 4 Lines and Angles I am a quadrilateral that has two sets of parallel line segments, four right angles, and two sets of congruent sides. I am a quadrilateral that has two sets of parallel line segments, four right angles, and four congruent sides. I am a quadrilateral that has one set of parallel line segments. I am a polygon that has three sides and one right angle. I am a polygon that has three sets of parallel line segments and six sides. I am a quadrilateral that has two sets of parallel line segments and my opposite angles are equal, but not equal to 90 . I am a polygon that has three sides, two of which are equal in length. I am a polygon that has three equal sides. Page 41 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Shape Template Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 42 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Shape Template Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 43 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Shape Template Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 44 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Where Is That Figure? triangle A polygon with three sides quadrilateral A polygon with four sides parallelogram A quadrilateral with opposite sides that are equal in length and parallel square A parallelogram with four equal sides and four equal angles Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 45 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Where Is That Figure? rectangle A parallelogram with four right angles and opposite sides of equal lengths rhombus A parallelogram with four equal sides and no right angles trapezoid A quadrilateral with only one pair of parallel sides pentagon A polygon with five sides Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 46 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Where Is That Figure? hexagon A polygon with six sides perpendicular lines Lines or line segments that intersect to form right angles intersecting lines Lines or line segments that meet or cross each other parallel lines Lines or line segments that are in the same plane but never intersect Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 47 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Where Is That Figure? circle A set of points in a plane that are the same distance from a given point called the center line segment Part of a line between two points called endpoints ray Part of a line that has one endpoint Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 48 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Shape Cards A B C D F E G Grade 4 Lines and Angles H Page 49 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Shape Cards I J L K N M P O Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 50 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Shape Cards Q R S T V U X W Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 51 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Shape Cards 1 2 3 4 5 6 8 7 Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 52 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Shape Cards 9 10 12 11 14 13 16 15 Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 53 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Shape Cards 18 17 20 19 21 22 23 Grade 4 Lines and Angles 24 Page 54 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Shape Sorting Record Sheet Name Sort the shapes according to the given categories. Look only at the interior angles of each figure. Record your sort by putting the letter of each shape under the column where it belongs. If a shape belongs in both of the first two columns, then list it only in the Both column. Put the shapes back in one pile and then do the next sort. Sort 1 All sides the same length At least one right angle Both Other Shapes All opposite sides parallel Sort 2 At least one angle larger than a right angle Both Other Shapes At least two lines of symmetry Sort 3 At least one angle larger than a right angle Both Other Shapes Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 55 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 All opposite sides equal Sort 4 At least one line of symmetry Both Other Shapes Sort 5 All opposite angles are equal No right angles Both Other Shapes At least one set of perpendicular lines Sort 6 At least one angle smaller than a right angle Both Other Shapes Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 56 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Shape Sorting Record Sheet Answer Key Name Sort the shapes according to the given categories. Look only at the interior angles of each figure. Record your sort by putting the letter of each shape under the column where it belongs. If a shape belongs in both of the first two columns, then list it only in the Both column. Put the shapes back in one pile and then do the next sort. Sort 1 All sides the same length At least one right angle Both C, D, G, J, P, Q, T B, E, M, N, S, V A Other Shapes F, H, I, K, L, O, R, U, W, X All opposite sides parallel A, B, N Other Shapes At least two lines of symmetry A, B, D, J, N Grade 4 Lines and Angles Sort 2 At least one angle larger than a right angle H, O, Q, R, S, U, V, W, X Both C, F, G, I, P, T D, E, J, K, L, M Sort 3 At least one angle larger than a right angle F, H, I, O, R, S, U, V, W, X Page 57 of 63 Both C, G, P, Q, T Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Other Shapes E, K, L, M All opposite sides equal F, I Other Shapes Sort 4 At least one line of symmetry Both D, E, H, J, K, M, Q, R, V A, B, C, G, N, P, T L, O, S, U, W, X Sort 5 All opposite angles are equal No right angles Both A, B, N D, H, J, K, L, O, Q, R, U, W, X C, F, G, I, P, T Other Shapes At least one set of perpendicular lines A, B, N Other Shapes Grade 4 Lines and Angles E, M, S, V Sort 6 At least one angle smaller than a right angle Both C, D, F, H, I, J, K, L, O, R, U, W, X E, M, S, V G, P, Q, T Page 58 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Venn Diagram Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 59 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Geoboard Shapes (Sample Clues) 1) Make a shape that has two sets of parallel lines, four equal sides and four right angles. (square) 2) Make a shape that has four right angles and the opposite sides are equal and parallel, but not all four sides are equal. (rectangle) 3) Create one set of parallel lines. 4) Create a pair of intersecting lines. 5) Create a pair of perpendicular lines. 6) Create a shape that has three sides that would intersect if the sides were all extended. (triangle) 7) Make a shape that has four sides and only one pair of parallel lines. (trapezoid) 8) Make a shape that has four equal sides, no right angles, two pairs of parallel lines, and the opposite angles are equal. (rhombus) 9) Make a shape that has two pairs of parallel lines, no right angles, opposite sides are equal but not all sides are the same length, and opposite angles are equal. (parallelogram) Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 60 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Letters A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 61 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Parallel Intersecting Venn Diagram Name Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 62 of 63 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Grade 4 Lines and Angles Page 63 of 63 Y K A X V T L Intersecting ` Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 W Z N M H F E Parallel Venn Diagram Answer Key O B R P D C S I U Q G J Mathematics Model Curriculum Grade Level: Fourth Grade Grading Period: 4 Common Core Domain Time Range: 5 Days Measurement and Data Common Core Standards Represent and interpret data. 4. Make a line plot to display a data set of measurements in fractions of a unit (1/2, 1/4, 1/8). Solve problems involving addition and subtraction of fractions by using information presented in line plots. For example, from a line plot find and interpret the difference in length between the longest and shortest specimens in an insect collection. The description from the Common Core Standards Critical Area of Focus for Grade 4 says: Students develop understanding of fraction equivalence and operations with fractions. They recognize that two different fractions can be equal (e.g., 15/9 = 5/3), and they develop methods for generating and recognizing equivalent fractions. Students extend previous understandings about how fractions are built from unit fractions, composing fractions from unit fractions, decomposing fractions into unit fractions, and using the meaning of fractions and the meaning of multiplication to multiply a fraction by a whole number. Content Elaborations This section will address the depth of the standards that are being taught. from ODE Model Curriculum Ohio has chosen to support shared interpretation of the standards by linking the work of multistate partnerships as the Mathematics Content Elaborations. Further clarification of the standards can be found through these reliable organizations and their links: Achieve the Core Modules, Resources Hunt Institute Video examples Institute for Mathematics and Education Learning Progressions Narratives Illustrative Mathematics Sample tasks National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics (NCSM) Resources, Lessons, Items National Council of Teacher of Mathematics (NCTM) Resources, Lessons, Items Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC) Resources, Items Expectations for Learning (Tasks and Assessments) Classroom tasks and assessments should be constructed in a way that challenges students to think and apply the information they are learning. Students should be able to summarize, analyze, organize, evaluate, predict, design, create, innovate, etc. Expectations for Learning (in development) from ODE Model Curriculum Ohio has selected PARCC as the contractor for the development of the Next Generation Assessments for Mathematics. PARCC is responsible for the development of the framework, blueprints, items, rubrics, and scoring for the assessments. Further information can be found at Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Grade 4 Data Page 1 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Mathematics Model Curriculum Careers (PARCC). Specific information is located at these links: Model Content Framework Item Specifications/Evidence Tables Sample Items Calculator Usage Accommodations Reference Sheets Sample assessment questions are included in this document. The following website has problem of the month problems and tasks that can be used to assess students and help guide your lessons. http://www.noycefdn.org/resources.php http://illustrativemathematics.org http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/itmrlsx/search.aspx http://nrich.maths.org At the end of this topic period students will demonstrate their understanding by…. Some examples include: Constructed Response Performance Tasks Portfolios ***A student’s nine week grade should be based on multiple academic criteria (classroom assignments and teacher made assessments). Instructional Strategies Columbus Curriculum Guide strategies for this topic are included in this document. Also utilize model curriculum, Ohiorc.org, textbooks, InfoOhio, etc. as resources to provide instructional strategies. Websites http://illuminations.nctm.org http://illustrativemathematics.org http://insidemathematics.org http://www.lessonresearch.net/lessonplans1.html Instructional Strategies from ODE Model Curriculum Data has been measured and represented on line plots in units of whole numbers, halves or quarters. Students have also represented fractions on number lines. Now students are using line plots to display measurement data in fraction units and using the data to solve problems involving addition or subtraction of fractions. Have students create line plots with fractions of a unit ( 12 , 14 , 18 ) and plot data showing multiple data points for each fraction. Grade 4 Data Page 2 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Mathematics Model Curriculum Pose questions that students may answer, such as “How many one-eighths are shown on the line plot?” Expect “two one-eighths” as the answer. Then ask, “What is the total of these two one-eighths?” Encourage students to count the fractional numbers as they would with whole-number counting, but using the fraction name. 3 8 “What is the total number of inches for insects measuring inches?” Students can use skip counting with fraction names to find the total, such as, “three-eighths, six-eighths, nine-eighths. The last fraction names the total. Students should notice that the denominator did not change when they were saying the fraction name. have them make a statement about the result of adding fractions with the same denominator. “What is the total number of insects measuring to represent the problem and solution such as, 1 8 1 8 + inch or 1 8 + 5 8 5 8 = inches?” Have students write number sentences 7 8 inches. Use visual fraction strips and fraction bars to represent problems to solve problems involving addition and subtraction of fractions. Instructional Resources/Tools from ODE Model Curriculum Fraction bars or strips Cuisenaire Rods Number lines Misconceptions/Challenges As you teach the lessons, identify the misconceptions/challenges that students have with the concepts being taught. Students use whole-number names when counting fractional parts on a number line. The fraction name should be used instead. For example, if two-fourths is represented on the line plot three times, then there would be sixfourths. Please read the Teacher Introductions, included in this document, for further understanding. Grade 4 Data Page 3 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Teacher Introduction Problem Solving The Common Core State Standards for Mathematical Practices focus on a mastery of mathematical thinking. Developing mathematical thinking through problem solving empowers teachers to learn about their students’ mathematical thinking. Students progressing through the Common Core curriculum have been learning intuitively, concretely, and abstractly while solving problems. This progression has allowed students to understand the relationships of numbers which are significantly different than the rote practice of memorizing facts. Procedures are powerful tools to have when solving problems, however if students only memorize the procedures, then they never develop an understanding of the relationships among numbers. Students need to develop fluency. However, teaching these relationships first, will allow students an opportunity to have a deeper understanding of mathematics. These practices are student behaviors and include: 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. Teaching the mathematical practices to build a mathematical community in your classroom is one of the major reforms in mathematics. The role of the teacher is to facilitate student thinking. These practices are not taught in isolation, but instead are connected to and woven throughout students’ work with the standards. Using open-ended problem solving in your classroom can teach to all of these practices. A problem-based approach to learning focuses on teaching for understanding. In a classroom with a problem-based approach, teaching of content is done THROUGH problem solving. Important math concepts and skills are embedded in the problems. Small group and whole class discussions give students opportunities to make connections between the explicit math skills and concepts from the standards. Open-ended problem solving helps students develop new strategies to solve problems that make sense to them. Misconceptions should be addressed by teachers and students while they discuss their strategies and solutions. When you begin using open-ended problem solving, you may want to choose problems from the Common Core Glossary, Table 2 (below) (multiplication and division situations) to pose to your students. Included are descriptions and examples of multiplication and division word problem structures. It is helpful to understand the type of structure that makes up a word problem. As a teacher, you can create word problems following the structures and also have students follow the structures to create word problems. This will deepen their understanding and give them important clues about ways they can solve a problem. Grade 4 Data Page 4 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Table 2 includes word problem structures/situations for multiplication and division from www.corestandards.org Equal Groups Arrays, 4 Area, 5 Compare 3×6=? There are 3 bags with 6 plums in each bag. How many plums are there in all? Measurement example: You need 3 lengths of string, each 6 inches long. How much string will you need altogether? Measurement example: You have 18 inches of string, which you will cut into 3 equal pieces. How long will each piece of string be? There are 3 rows of apples with 6 apples in each row. How many apples are there? If 18 apples are arranged into 3 equal rows, how many apples will be in each row? If 18 apples are arranged into equal rows of 6 apples, how many rows will there be? Area example: What is the area of a 3 cm by 6 cm rectangle? Area example: A rectangle has an area of 18 square centimeters. If one side is 3 cm long, how long is a side next to it? A red hat costs $18 and that is 3 times as much as a blue hat costs. How much does a blue hat cost? Area example: A rectangle has an area of 18 square centimeters. If one side is 6 cm long, how long is a side next to it? Measurement example: A rubber band is stretched to be 18 cm long and that is 3 times as long as it was at first. How long was the rubber band at first? a × ? = p, and p ÷ a = ? Measurement example: A rubber band was 6 cm long at first. Now it is stretched to be 18 cm long. How many times as long is the rubber band now as it was at first? ? × b = p, and p ÷ b = ? A blue hat costs $6. A red hat costs 3 times as much as the blue hat. How much does the red hat cost? Measurement example: A rubber band is 6 cm long. How long will the rubber band be when it is stretched to be 3 times as long? General Number of Groups Unknown (“How many groups?” Division Group Size Unknown (“How many in each group?” Division) 3 × ? = 18, and 18 ÷ 3 = ? If 18 plums are shared equally into 3 bags, then how many plums will be in each bag? Unknown Product a×b=? ? × 6 = 18, and 18 ÷ 6 = ? If 18 plums are to be packed 6 to a bag, then how many bags are needed? Measurement example: You have 18 inches of string, which you will cut into pieces that are 6 inches long. How many pieces of string will you have? A red hat costs $18 and a blue hat costs $6. How many times as much does the red hat cost as the blue hat? The problem structures become more difficult as you move right and down through the table (i.e. an “Unknown Product-Equal Groups” problem is the easiest, while a “Number of Groups Unknown-Compare” problem is the most difficult). Discuss with students the problem structure/situation, what they know (e.g., groups and group size), and what they are solving for (e.g., product). The Common Core State Standards require students to solve each type of problem in the table throughout the school year. Included in this guide are many sample problems that could be used with your students. There are three categories of word problem structures/situations for multiplication and division: Unknown Product, Group Size Unknown and Number of Groups Unknown. There are three main ideas that the word structures include; equal groups or equal sized units of measure, arrays/areas and comparisons. All problem structures/situations can be represented using symbols and equations. Unknown Product: (a × b = ?) In this structure/situation you are given the number of groups and the size of each group. You are trying to determine the total items in all the groups. Grandma has 4 piles of her famous oatmeal cookies. There are 3 oatmeal cookies in each pile. How many cookies does Grandma have? Grade 4 Data Page 5 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Group Size Unknown: (a × ? = p and p ÷ a = ?) In this structure/situation you know how many equal groups and the total amount of items. You are trying to determine the size in each group. This is a partition situation. Grandma gives 12 cookies to 4 grandchildren and each grandchild is given the same number of cookies. How many cookies will each grandchild get? Number of Groups Unknown: (? × b = p and p ÷ b = ?) In this structure/situation you know the size in each group and the total amount of items is known. You are trying to determine the number of groups. This is a measurement situation. Grandma gave 12 cookies to some of her grandchildren. She gave each grandchild 3 cookies. How many grandchildren got cookies? Students should also be engaged in multi-step problems and logic problems (Reason abstractly and quantitatively). They should be looking for patterns and thinking critically about problem situations (Look for and make use of structure and Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning). Problems should be relevant to students and make a real-world connection whenever possible. The problems should require students to use 21st Century skills, including critical thinking, creativity/innovation, communication and collaboration (Model with mathematics). Technology will enhance the problem solving experience. Problem solving may look different from grade level to grade level, room to room and problem to problem. However, all open-ended problem solving has three main components. In each session, the teacher poses a problem, gives students the freedom to solve the problem (using math tools, drawing a picture, acting it out, etc.), and record their thinking. Finally, the students share their thinking and strategies (Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others). Component 1- Pose the problem Problems posed during the focus lesson lead to a discussion that focuses on a concept being taught. Once an open-ended problem is posed, students should solve the problem independently and/or in small groups. As the year progresses, some of the problems posed during the Math APSS part of the One-Hour Block of Math will take multiple days to solve (Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them). Students may solve the problem over one or more class sessions. The sharing and questioning may take place during a different class session. Component 2- Solve the problem During open-ended problems, students need to record their thinking. Students can record their thinking either formally using an ongoing math notebook or informally using white boards or thinking paper. Formal math notebooks allow you, parents, and students to see growth as the year progresses. Math notebooks also give students the opportunity to refer back to previous strategies when solving new problems. Teachers should provide opportunities for students to revise their solutions and explanations as other students share their thinking. Students’ written explanations should include their “work”. This could be equations, numbers, pictures, etc. If Grade 4 Data Page 6 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 students used math tools to solve the problem, they should include a picture to represent how the tools were used. Students’ writing should include an explanation of their strategy as well as justification or proof that their answer is reasonable and correct. Component 3- Share solutions, strategies and thinking After students have solved the problem, gather the class together as a whole to share students’ thinking. Ask one student or group to share their method of solving the problem while the rest of the class listens. Early in the school year, the teacher models for students how to ask clarifying questions and questions that require the student(s) presenting to justify the use of their strategy. As the year progresses, students should ask the majority of questions during the sharing of strategies and solutions. Possible questions the students could ask include “Why did you solve the problem that way?” or “How do you know your answer is correct?” or “Why should I use your strategy the next time I solve a similar problem?” When that student or group is finished, ask another student in the class to explain in his/her own words what they think the student did to solve the problem. Ask students if the problem could be solved in a different way and encourage them to share their solution. You could also “randomly” pick a student or group who used a strategy you want the class to understand. Calling on students who used a good strategy but did not arrive at the correct answer also leads to rich mathematical discussions and gives students the opportunity to “critique the reasoning of others”. This highlights that the answer is not the most important part of open-ended problem solving and that it’s alright to take risks and make mistakes. At the end of each session, the mathematical thinking should be made explicit for students so they fully understand the strategies and solutions of the problem. Misconceptions should be addressed. As students share their strategies, you may want to give the strategies names and post them in the room. When you give the strategy a name (i.e., “What Thomas did is called the ‘Guess and Check’ strategy.”) it helps students to write and discuss their work more precisely. Add to the list as strategies come up during student sharing rather than starting the year with a whole list posted. This keeps students from assuming the strategies on a pre-printed list are the ONLY strategies that can be used. Possible strategies students may use include: Act It Out Make a Table Find a Pattern Guess and Check Make a List Draw a Picture Grade 4 Data Page 7 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 When you use open-ended problem solving in your mathematics instruction, students should have access to a variety of problem solving “math tools” to use as they find solutions to problems. Several types of math tools can be combined into one container that is placed on the table so that students have a choice as they solve each problem, or math tools can be located in a part of the classroom where students have easy access to them. Remember that math tools, such as place value blocks or color tiles, do not teach a concept, but are used to represent a concept. Therefore, students may select math tools to represent an idea or relationship for which that tool is not typically used (e.g., ten bears may be used to represent a group of 10 rather than selecting a rod or ten individual cubes). Some examples of math tools may include: one inch color tiles, centimeter cubes, Unifix® or snap cubes, two-color counters, and frog, bear or other type of animal counters. Students should also have access to a hundred chart and a number line. Problem solving can occur in a variety of settings in classrooms. Students may sit in pairs or small student groups using math tools to solve a problem while recording their thinking on whiteboards. Students could solve a problem using role playing or SMART Board manipulatives to act it out. Occasionally whole group thinking with the teacher modeling how to record strategies can be useful. These whole group recordings can be kept in a class problem solving book. As students have more experience solving problems they should become more refined in their use of tools. The first several weeks of open-ended problem solving can be a daunting and overwhelming experience. A routine needs to be established so that students understand the expectations during problem solving time. Initially, the sessions can seem loud and disorganized while students become accustomed to the math tools and the problem solving process. Students become more familiar with the routine as the year progresses, so don’t abandon the process if it doesn’t run smoothly the first few times you try. The more regularly you engage students in open-ended problem solving, the more organized the sessions become. The benefits and rewards of using a problem-based approach to teaching and learning mathematics far outweigh the initial confusion of this approach. Using the open-ended problem solving approach helps our students to grow as problem solvers and critical thinkers. Engaging your students in this process frequently will prepare them for success as 21st Century learners. Grade 4 Data Page 8 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Line Plots Teacher Introduction The purpose of the Teacher Introductions is to build content knowledge for teachers. Having depth of knowledge for the Measurement and Data domain is helpful when assessing student work and student thinking. This information could be used to guide classroom discussions, understand student misconceptions and provide differentiation opportunities. The focus of instruction is the Common Core Mathematics Standards. Line plots are used to show the frequency of data on a number line. Line plots make it easy to see how data is grouped. A line plot is made of a number line with the appropriate number of marks above each number to represent the data. A line plot needs a title so the reader knows what the data represents. An advantage using a line plot is that it will include every piece of data. It is similar to a bar graph in that in that there is a bar for every possible value. Line plots share factual information about the data that is represented and allows opportunities to make inferences that are not directly stated on the graph. Line plots provide many opportunities to ask questions similar to questions that can be asked about bar graphs. Identify the number of ants that had the longest length? How do you think the graph would look different if we measured the length of a group of spiders? (Possible answers: The spiders might be longer in length.) What’s the difference in length between the longest and shortest ant. Use the data to create a horizontal bar graph. What is the combined length of all the ants you measured? Show your work. 0 8 X X X X X 1 8 2 8 3 8 X X X X X X X X X X X X X 4 8 5 8 6 8 X X X X X X 7 8 8 8 Length of Ants Grade 4 Data Page 9 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS The local paper recorded the snowfall for the month of December. Make a line plot, using intervals of one-eighth. Write an equation representing the difference between the highest amount of snowfall and the lowest amount of snowfall. Day Inches of Snowfall December 10 1 8 December 15 5 8 December 16 8 8 December 23 11 December 24 12 December 29 5 8 8 8 . A track coach recorded how far students were able in run in 11 minutes. How many students ran at least 1.5 miles? 0 4 1 4 X X X 2 4 3 4 4 4 X X X X X X X X 5 4 6 4 7 4 8 4 Distance in Miles A. 1 student B. 4 students C. 8 students D. 11 students Grade 4 Data Page 10 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Answers/Rubrics The local paper recorded the snowfall for the month of December. Make a line plot, using intervals of one-eighth. Write an equation representing the difference between the highest amount of snowfall and the lowest amount of snowfall. Day Inches of Snowfall December 10 1 8 December 15 5 8 December 16 8 8 December 23 11 December 24 12 December 29 5 8 8 8 X X X 0 8 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 X X X 8 8 9 8 10 8 Inches of Snowfall Answer: 10 8 1 8 - = 9 1 or 1 8 8 A 2-point response shows a correct line plot including titles, labels, and intervals. A 1-point response shows a line plot which may be missing a title or labels or intervals. A 0-point response shows no mathematical understanding of the problem. A track coach recorded how far students were able in run in 11 minutes. How many students ran at least 1.5 miles? A 2-point response includes a correct line plot with a title. A 1-point response includes a line plot X withX some errors X in the X X X data, X scale, X or X X title. X 1 3 4 shows 5 no mathematical 6 7 A. response 1 student A 0-point includes 0a line plot with2 many errors or 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 understanding of this task. Distance in Miles B. 4 students 8 4 C. 8 students D. 11 students Answer: C Grade 4 Data Page 11 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS The students in Mrs. Weaver’s classroom measured objects on a table in the classroom. On the line plot below is the measured data that was collected. If you put all the objects together end to end what would be the total length of all objects? X X X X 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 8 8 9 8 X X X X X X X X X 10 8 11 8 12 8 13 8 Length of Objects in Inches Recetta recorded in a table and line plot the length of glass beads she has in her craft box. Recetta made a mistake. Identify the error. Number of Beads Length in Inches 3 1 4 2 3 8 3 1 2 2 7 8 4 8 8 5 6 8 X X X X X X X X 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 X X X X X X X X X X X 6 8 7 8 8 8 Bead Length in Inches Grade 4 Data Page 12 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 PRACTICE ASSESSMENT ITEMS Answers/Rubrics The students in Mrs. Weaver’s classroom measured objects on a table in the classroom. On the line plot below is the measured data that was collected. If you put all the objects together end to end what would be the total length of all objects? X X X X 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 8 8 9 8 X X X X X X X X X 10 8 11 8 12 8 13 8 Length of Objects in Inches Answer: 15 7 8 = 4 8 6 8 8 8 8 8 10 8 10 8 10 8 11 8 11 8 11 8 12 8 13 8 13 8 127 8 15 7 8 or 127 8 Recetta recorded in a table and line plot the length of glass beads she has in her craft box. Recetta made a mistake. Identify the error. Bead Lengths Number of beads Length in Inches 3 1 4 2 3 8 3 1 2 2 7 8 4 8 8 5 6 8 X 1 8 X X X 4 8 X X 2 8 3 8 5 8 X X X X X 6 8 X X X X X X 7 8 8 8 Length in Inches Answer: The line plot has the incorrect value data for 82 . The table has 3 data values and the line has 2 data values. A 2-point response identifies the correct error. A 1-point response identifies the correct length but gives the wrong data value. A 0-point response shows no mathematical understanding of the problem. Grade 4 Data Page 13 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 TEACHING STRATEGIES/ACTIVITIES Vocabulary: line plot, fractions, addition, subtraction data, analyze, compare, evaluate, graphic organizer, symbols, title, labels, key, symbolic representation, survey, scale, predict, frequency, interval 1. The word problems below can be presented to students in a variety of ways. Some options include: using the questions to create a choice-board, Math-O board, one problem per class session, one problem each evening for homework, partner work or as an assessment question. The strength of problem solving lies in the rich discussion afterward. As the school year progresses students should be able to justify their own thinking as well as the thinking of others. This can be done through comparing strategies, arguing another student’s solution strategy or summarizing another student’s sharing. Amanda grew bean sprouts in science class. After a week, she measured the length of each plant and recorded her data in the table. Record her data on the line plot, label the line plot, and explain why you placed the data where you did. 0 8 1 8 Number of plants Height in inches 3 1 4 2 1 8 3 1 2 1 1 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 8 8 Employees of the zoo were tracking the amount of gallons of milk produced by the pygmy goats. They recorded the data in the table. Transfer their data to the line plot and label the line plot. How many total gallons of milk did the goats produce? # of Goats 0 4 1 4 2 4 Gallons of milk 1 1 4 2 4 4 2 5 4 2 7 4 3 4 4 4 5 4 6 4 7 4 8 4 Zoey has used a line plot to record the length, in inches, of the insects in her collection. How many of her insects are over one inch long? If Zoey placed her longest insects end to end, what would the total length be? Grade 4 Data Page 14 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 X X 0 8 X X 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 X X X X X X X X X 7 8 8 8 9 8 10 8 Wilma kept track of the number of cups of water each of her five dogs drank in a day. Make a line plot of her data. How much water did the five dogs drink? Roxie……….1 cup Sweetums…..2 ½ cups Ralphie……..2 cups Mr. Snarls….4 cups Frito………..2 ½ cups 1 2 2 2 3 2 4 2 5 2 6 2 7 2 8 2 How many one-eighths are shown on the line plot? What is their total? How many five-eighths are shown? What is their total? X X X X X 1 8 2 8 0 8 3 8 X X X X X X X X X X X X X 4 8 5 8 6 8 X X X X X X 7 8 8 8 Using the line plot data, add the number of ½ inch items and the number of ¾ inch items together. 0 8 X X X 1 8 2 8 3 8 X X X X X X X 4 8 5 8 6 8 X 7 8 8 8 If all the longest items on the line graph were added together, how much longer would they be than all the shortest items? 0 4 Grade 4 Data 1 4 X X X 2 4 3 4 4 4 Page 15 of 26 X X X X X X X X 5 4 6 4 7 4 8 4 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Jesse recorded the rainfall in his neighborhood over a two-week period. Make a line plot, using intervals of one-eighth. Write two different equations that represent the difference between the highest amount of rainfall and the lowest. Day Inches of Rainfall June 12 11 4 June 13 June 18 1 June 19 1 4 June 26 3 8 June 28 3 8 5 8 Customers at Good Grief Tattoo Parlor can choose from a 1 8 inch, 2 8 inch, or 4 8 inch tattoo. The Parlor had 5 customers on Thursday. Make a line plot that displays the sizes of tattoos they could have sold. Use your line plot to calculate how many inches of tattoo they inked that day. Customers at Crazy 8 Tattoos have a choice of getting a 1 4 inch, 3 8 inch, or 1 2 inch tattoo. The shop inked a total of 3 inches of tattoos on Wednesday. Make a line plot that displays the sizes and numbers of tattoos they could have sold. 2. https://www.georgiastandards.org/Common-Core/Pages/Math-K-5.aspx Go to the above web page, open grade 4 on the right side of the page. Open “Unit 7 Framework Student Edition.” These tasks are from the Georgia Department of Education. The tasks build on one another. You may or may not use all of the tasks. There are four different types of tasks. Scaffolding tasks build up to the constructing tasks which develop a deep understanding of the concept. Next, there are practice tasks and finally performance tasks which are a summative assessment for the unit. Select the tasks that best fit with your lessons and the standards being taught at that time. 3. Divide students into groups of four. Each group will be responsible for working together to come up with a list of survey questions that could be asked of the class. Explain to the class that each question posed must have a purpose. These purposes include comparing and contrasting sets of data, making predictions from sets of data, summarizing sets of data, and determining preferences from sets of data. For example: o Do the number of fractional parts of an hour or more than an hour it takes students to complete their homework differ between 4th and 5th grade students? o What is the typical foot measure of students in our class? o Which foot length was the most popular among girls or boys in the 4th grade? Have groups complete their lists. Record the group responses by writing the questions and the purpose for each question on chart paper. Discuss which survey questions would enable students to gather obtainable classroom data. Next, have each group choose one of their survey questions, and create a plan for collecting the data. Groups write their question and plan on chart paper. Share all charts. Hang up charts to use the next day. On day two have Grade 4 Data Page 16 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 students gather in their same groups. They use their survey question and plan to collect data from their class members. Give students 10 minutes to gather data from each other. After students have recorded the data, have one person from each group share the method they used to record the data. Discuss the methods for organizing data. Model organizing data by taking a class survey to find the favorite colors of the class. Organize the information into a table with tallies and also create a frequency table. Give groups the opportunity to display their question and data using one of these methods on chart paper. Have each group represent their data using a line plot. 4. Pose the question: How many hours do you watch television on a school night? Give the choices of 1 hour, 1 1 , 1 1 , 1 3 , 2, 2 1 , 2 1 , 2 3 , and 3. Set up the choices so they are the 4 2 4 4 2 4 categories across the bottom of what will become a line plot. Have students use sticky notes to represent their responses. Have the students use the collected data to create a line plot. Make sure to emphasize correct labeling, including a title. Next, have students get back into their groups from the previous lesson and use the data from the survey they conducted to create a group line plot. Have each group share their completed line plot and discuss the process they used to choose their topic, define their purpose, collect their data, and create the line plot. 5. Divide the students in groups of four and assign each group a letter (A-F, assign two groups the same letter if necessary). Give each student a “Survey Tally Sheet” (included in this Curriculum Guide). Combine two groups of four together to collect data from each other. If students have more responses than there are spaces on the chart, then have them create a tally chart for the other numbers on the back of the paper. Each group is responsible for collecting data for only the table that has the same letter as their group letter. Keep changing the groups that are together until every group has had an opportunity to collect data from every other group in the class. Each group is then responsible for creating a line plot of the data that they collected. Make sure students give their line plot a title and have the appropriate number of X’s above each number to represent their data. Have one member from each group present the group’s line plot to the rest of the class. Grade 4 Data Page 17 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 RESOURCES Textbook: Mathematics, Scott Foresman-Addison Wesley (2004): pp. None Supplemental: Mathematics, Scott Foresman-Addison Wesley (2004): Enrichment Master pp. None Practice Master pp. None Problem Solving Master pp. None Reteaching Master pp. None Grade 4 Data Page 18 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving Questions Amanda grew bean sprouts in science class. After a week, she measured the length of each plant and recorded her data in the table. Record her data on the line plot, label the line plot, and explain why you placed the data where you did. Number of plants Height in inches 0 8 1 8 0 8 2 8 1 8 3 1 4 2 1 8 3 1 2 1 1 3 8 2 8 4 8 3 8 5 8 4 8 6 8 5 8 7 8 6 8 8 8 7 8 8 8 Employees of the zoo were tracking the amount of gallons of milk produced by the pygmy goats. They recorded the data in the table. Transfer their data to the line plot and label the line plot. How many total gallons of milk did the goats produce? # of Goats Gallons of milk Insert number line with the following intervals marked: 0/4 ¼ 2/4 ¾ 4/4 5/4 6/4 7/4 8/4 0 4 0 4 1 4 1 4 2 4 2 4 3 4 3 4 4 4 4 4 5 4 5 4 6 4 6 4 7 4 1 1 4 2 4 4 2 5 4 2 7 4 8 4 7 4 8 4 Zoey has used a line plot to record the length, in inches, of the insects in her collection. How many of her insects are over one inch long? If Zoey placed her longest insects end to end, what would the total length be? X 1 8 X X X 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 X X X 7 8 X X X X X X 8 8 9 8 10 8 Length of Insects in Inches Grade 4 Data Page 19 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving Questions Wilma kept track of the number of cups of water each of her five dogs drank in a day. Make a line plot of her data. How much water did the five dogs drink? Roxie……….1 cup Sweetums…..2 ½ cups Ralphie……..2 cups Mr. Snarls….4 cups Frito………..2 ½ cups 1 2 2 2 3 2 4 2 5 2 6 2 7 2 8 2 How many one-eighths are shown on the line plot? What is their total? How many five-eighths are shown? What is their total? 0 8 X X X X X 1 8 2 8 3 8 X X X X X X X X X X X X X 4 8 5 8 6 8 X X X X X X 7 8 8 8 Using the line plot data, add the number of ½ inch items and the number of ¾ inch items together. 0 8 Grade 4 Data X X X 1 8 2 8 3 8 X X X X X X X 4 8 5 8 6 8 Page 20 of 26 X 7 8 8 8 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving Questions If all the longest items on the line graph were added together, how much longer would they be than all the shortest items? 0 4 1 4 X X X 2 4 3 4 4 4 X X X X X X X X 5 4 6 4 7 4 8 4 Jesse recorded the rainfall in his neighborhood over a two-week period. Make a line plot, using intervals of one-eighth. Write two different equations that represent the difference between the highest amount of rainfall and the lowest. Day June 12 Inches of Rainfall June 13 June 18 1 June 19 1 4 June 26 3 8 June 28 3 8 1 1 4 5 8 Customers at Good Grief Tattoo Parlor can choose from a 1 8 inch, 2 8 inch, or 4 8 inch tattoo. The Parlor had 5 customers on Thursday. Make a line plot that displays the sizes of tattoos they could have sold. Use your line plot to calculate how many inches of tattoo they inked that day. Customers at Crazy 8 Tattoos have a choice of getting a 1 4 inch, 3 8 inch, or 1 2 inch tattoo. The shop inked a total of 3 inches of tattoos on Wednesday. Make a line plot that displays the sizes and numbers of tattoos they could have sold. Grade 4 Data Page 21 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving QuestionsAnswers Amanda grew bean sprouts in science class. After a week, she measured the length of each plant and recorded her data in the table. Record her data on the line plot, label the line plot, and explain why you placed the data where you did. Number of plants Height in inches 1 3 4 0 80 8 XX X XX X XX X XX X XX X 1 81 8 2 82 8 2 1 8 3 1 2 1 1 XX X XX X XX X 3 83 8 XXX 4 84 8 5 85 8 6 86 8 7 87 8 8 88 8 Heightof ofPlants Plantsin inInches Inches Height Answer: Line plot should be marked as above. Students should explain that they converted fractions in the table to equivalent eighths in order to plot the points in the line plot. 1 1 = 2 = 4 1= 8 4 8 2 8 8 Employees of the zoo were tracking the amount of gallons of milk produced by the pygmy goats. They recorded the data in the table. Transfer their data to the line plot. How many total gallons of milk did the goats produce? # of Goats Gallons of milk 1 1 4 2 4 4 2 5 4 2 7 4 X 0 4 1 4 2 4 3 4 X X X X 4 4 5 4 X X 6 4 7 4 8 4 Gallons of Milk Produced By Pygmy Goats Answer: Line plot should be marked as above. The goats produced 1 + 44 + 44 + 54 + 54 + 74 + 74 = 33 or 8 14 gallons of milk. 4 4 Grade 4 Data Page 22 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving Questions Answers Zoey has used a line plot to record the length, in inches, of the insects in her collection. How many of her insects are over one inch long? If Zoey placed her longest insects end to end, what would the total X X length be? X X X X X X X 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 X X X X 7 8 8 8 9 8 10 8 Length of Insects in Inches Length of Insects in Inches Answer: Five insects are over an inch long. The longest insects end to end total 6 8 10 8 inches. 10 8 + + 10 8 = 30 8 30 8 inches, or 3 =36. 8 Wilma kept track of the number of cups of water each of her five dogs drank in a day. Make a line plot of her data and add a label. How much water did the five dogs drink? Roxie……….1 cup Sweetums…..2 ½ cups Ralphie……..2 cups Mr. Snarls….4 cups Frito………..2 ½ cups X 1 2 2 2 X X X 4 2 5 2 3 2 X 6 2 7 2 8 2 Water Dogs Drank in Cups Answer: Wilma’s dogs drank a total of 2 2 + 4 2 + 5 2 + 5 2 + 8 2 = 24 2 24 2 , or 12 cups of water. Length of Insects in Inches = 12 cups How many one-eighths are shown on the line plot? What is their total? How many five-eighths are shown? What is their total? X 0 8 X X X X X 1 8 2 8 3 8 X X X X X X X X X X X X 4 8 5 8 6 8 Answer: There are 4 one-eighths on the line plot. They total line plot. They total 20 eighths: 5 8 + 5 8 + 5 8 + 5 8 = 20 8 4 8 X X X X X X 7 8 8 8 . There are 4 five-eighths on the . Students can skip count by fives to arrive at the answer. Grade 4 Data Page 23 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving Questions Answers Using the line plot data, add the number of 0 8 4 8 Answer: + 4 8 + 6 8 + 6 8 X X X 1 8 2 8 = 20 8 = 2 1 2 X X X X X X X 4 8 5 8 6 8 3 8 4 8 or 2 3 4 inch items and the number of inch items together. X 7 8 8 8 1 2 If all the longest items on the line graph were added together, how much longer would they be than X all the shortest items? XX X 0 0 4 4 1 1 4 4 X XX X X X 2 2 4 4 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 XX XX X X X XX XX X 5 5 4 4 6 6 4 4 7 7 4 4 8 8 4 4 Answer: The longest items would be a total of 17/4, or 4 ¼ units longer than the shortest items. 2 7 21 + 2 = 4 + 7 + 7 = 21 – 4 = 174 = 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Jesse recorded the rainfall in his neighborhood over a two-week period. Make a line plot, using intervals of one-eighth. Write two different equations that represent the difference between the highest amount of rainfall and the lowest. Day Inches of Rainfall June 12 1 1 4 0 8 1 8 June 13 June 18 1 June 19 1 4 June 26 3 8 June 28 3 8 X X X 2 8 3 8 5 8 X X 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 X 8 8 9 8 10 8 Inches of Rainfall Answer: The difference between the highest and lowest rainfalls is 1 inch. Grade 4 Data Page 24 of 26 10 8 – 2 8 = 8 8 = 1 or 1 1 4 - 1 4 =1 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Problem Solving Questions Answers Customers at Good Grief Tattoo Parlor can choose from a 1 8 inch, 2 8 inch, or 4 8 inch tattoo. The Parlor had 5 customers on Thursday. Make a line plot that displays the sizes of tattoos they could have sold. Use your line plot to calculate how many inches of tattoo they inked that day. Answers will vary. Encourage students to create line plots that show at least one of each size of tattoos. Customers at Crazy 8 Tattoos have a choice of getting a 1 4 inch, 3 8 inch, or 1 2 inch tattoo. The shop inked a total of 3 inches of tattoos on Wednesday. Make a line plot that displays the sizes and numbers of tattoos they could have sold. Answers will vary. Students should convert the tattoos to eighths before plotting on a line plot. Encourage students to include at least one of each size of tattoos. Grade 4 Data Page 25 of 26 Columbus City Schools 2013-2014 Survey Tally Sheet Name Group A Group B Length of index finger Number of Students Group C Circumference of head Number of Students Group D Height Number of Students Width of palm Number of Students Group E Grade 4 Data Length of foot Group F Length of arm span Page 26 of 26 Number of Students Number of Students Columbus City Schools 2013-2014