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Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Put A, B, and C in order on the number line: Geography? Clue 1: A is positive. Clue 2: B is negative. Clue 3: A < C A number line shows the position, order, and space between numbers, kind of like a map for numbers. I I 0 B I I A C If n – 5 = 13, what is n? 13 14 I I n–5 n–4 I I 18 I I n Dear Student, Every real number lives on the number line, no matter how huge or how small, including the most cumbersome fractions and the most complicated decimals. Every number lives close to a lot of other numbers, and between every two numbers are infinitely many other numbers. Because the number line captures all of this in one image, it is a valuable tool used by mathematicians to picture relationships among numbers. Your work in this unit will involve finding where positive and negative numbers live and learning how to use the number line to picture addition, subtraction, and even algebra. The Authors I -15 I -12 I -9 I -6 I -3 I 0 I 3 I 6 I 9 I 12 I 15 -9 ≤ x < 6 t Who Am I? • I am odd. 1 • u>t • I am less than 30. • The sum of my digits is 10. I 18 I 21 I 24 10 10 u 10 9 10 2 3 4 + 5 6 7 8 In each box, put the sum of the numbers that point to it. Unit 2 Introduction Teacher Guide 1 T1 The Transition to Algebra materials are being developed at Education Development Center, Inc. in Waltham, MA. More information on this research and development project is available at ttalgebra.edc.org. Copyright © 2013 by Education Development Center, Inc. Pre-publication draft. Do not copy, quote, or cite without written permission. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means except for classroom use only. You may not distribute these materials outside the classroom. The use of these materials is limited to the 2013-14 school year. This material is based on work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. ESI-0917958. Opinions expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the Foundation. Development and Research Team: Cindy Carter, Tracy Cordner, Jeff Downin, Mary K. Fries, Paul Goldenberg, Mari Halladay, Susan Janssen, Jane M. Kang, Doreen Kilday, Jo Louie, June Mark, Deborah Spencer, Yu Yan Xu Pilot and Field Test Site Staff: Attleboro School District: Linda Ferreira, Jamie Plante Chelsea High School: Ralph Hannabury, Brittany Jordan, Jeanne Lynch-Galvin, Deborah Miller, Alex Somers Lawrence High School: Yu Yan Xu Lowell High School: Jodi Ahern, Ornella Bascunan, Jeannine Durkin, Kevin Freeman, Samnang Hor, Wendy Jack, Patrick Morasse, Maureen Mulryan, Thy Oeur, Krisanne Santarpio Malden High School: Jason Asciola, Hava Daniels, Maryann Finn, Chris Giordano, Nick Lippman, Paul Marques The Rashi School: Cindy Carter Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line This unit presents the number line as a tool for reasoning about integers and the relationships between integers, including order and distance. The number line is also used as a tool for making sense of the operations of addition and subtraction, first with numbers and then generalized to variables. Lesson 1: Placing Integers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . T12 Lesson 2: Operations with Integers. . . . . . . . . . . T20 Lesson 3: Checkers and Who Am I? Puzzles. . . T28 Snapshot Check-in. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . T73 Lesson 4: Distance and Inequalities. . . . . . . . . . T36 Lesson 5: Geography of Addition and Subtraction.T43 Lesson 6: Algebra on the Number Line . . . . . . . T50 Unit Assessment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . T76 Mental Mathematics • Distances, Adding, and Subtracting Exploration • Toothpick Rows. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . T4 • Color Towers 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . T8 Related Activity • Who Am I? Number Bingo. . . . . . . . . . . . . T59 Number Line Using these Materials In order to make sense of arithmetic operations without reverting to rules, which may seem arbitrary or be misapplied, students must be comfortable with the geography of the number line. Students must learn that numbers have distinctive “personalities” due to their location and order on the number line, and they can make sense of the results of operations performed on these numbers by considering the relationship between them. Explorations are a key component of the curriculum as a way of teaching students how to think mathematically. There are two Explorations in Unit 2; both are located at the beginning of the unit in the Student Book and Teacher Guide. Since the Explorations are not tied to any particular lesson, you may choose when in the unit to use them. The Related Activity for Unit 2 is a bingo game. The instructions are located on page T59 in the Teacher Guide and on page 35 in the Student Book. The game uses a set of cards which are found in the Teacher Guide on page T60. Wh er The number line is presented as a tool for reasoning about numbers because it builds students’ familiarity with the magnitude of numbers, distance between numbers, and order of numbers. Students will revisit the number line in Units 3 and 6. In Unit 3, MicroGeography of the Number Line, students will see that decimals and fractions follow the same logic of integers on a zoomed in number line. In Unit 6, Geography of the Plane, students will see that two orthogonal number lines form the axes of a coordinate plane. I? Where Am I? Number Puzzles m a e Where Am I? number puzzles support flexible thinking with the number line as students use clues to find the possible location of numbers. Two forms of the puzzles are shown here: Clue: I am less than 60. My name is n. Where am I? Use symbols: n < 60 Show everywhere I could be. I T2 I 0 I 20 I 40 II 60 I Clue: I am 20 units away from -4. Where am I? I -24 I I -4 0 I 16 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Note that both Where Am I? puzzles have more than one solution. In the first puzzle, students learn how to mark inequalities on the number line to indicate infinite solutions. In the second puzzle, students use the number line to determine the two possible solutions. Students connect these ideas to algebra in problems like these: Clue: I am 9 units away from p. Where am I? p – 9 I p + -9 I p If a + 4 = 1, what is a? p – -9 I p + 9 I -3 -2 I a I -1 I 0 I 1 I a+4 Who Am I? Number Puzzles In solving these puzzles, students develop their own methods for coordinating multiple “clues” that deal with the properties of an unknown number and its digits. These puzzles strengthen logical reasoning as well as mathematical language comprehension and translation. Who Am I? • The sum of my digits is 16. • My tens digit is greater than my units digit. t u 9 7 Algebraic Habits of Mind Using Tools Strategically: The number line is a tool that can help make sense of a calculation. The focus of this unit is not just on how to use the number line but also on developing the mathematical thinking promoted by picturing a number line. Students learn to look at problems and make sense of them by turning to a tool that helps locate and compare numbers. Students learn to see addition and subtraction as more than an action to be done to two numbers; they are part of a larger system in which numbers are related to each other. Adding and subtracting positive and negative numbers is no longer about error-prone algorithms and mis-remembered rules, but about predicting where the answer will fall and making sense of problems using distance and order on the number line. Puzzling and Persevering: Where Am I? puzzles ask students to make sense of clues to locate values on the number line. Because puzzles may have multiple (often infinitely many) solutions, students must figure out if they have found all possible solutions. Who Am I? puzzles help students build working memory and the ability to coordinate multiple pieces of information and draw logical conclusions. Students must find a way to start the problem and evaluate possible solutions against multiple criteria. Communicating Clearly: Students continue to practice the use of mathematical language in Thinking Out Loud dialogues. Describing what they see on a number line helps students make sense of each problem and solidify their reasoning. Learning Goals: • Order and place positive and negative numbers on the number line. • Make and use observations about sums and differences on the number line. • Use the number line to determine the distance between two numbers. • Represent inequalities on the number line. • Reason abstractly about number placement and operations using variables. • Translate verbal and symbolic puzzle clues. Teacher Guide T3 Exploration: Toothpick Rows Purpose This Exploration leads students toward building an algebraic expression. Students first observe a numerical pattern, experience how the numerical pattern is applied to more numbers, and then describe the pattern of calculation using an algebraic expression. The pattern can be explained visually (using geometry) and physically (using manipulatives). Exploration at a Glance Preparation: Each group needs approximately 30 toothpicks or other short sticks (straws, crayons, etc.). Mental Mathematics: (5 min) See pages XX-XX of the TTA Mental Mathematics book. Launch: (5 min) • Quickly make sure students understand the task. Student Exploration and Discussion: (35 min) • Provide time for students to explore on their own. • Discuss algebraic expressions that students may write for the number of toothpicks. Unit 2 Related Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo (See Teacher Guide page T59 and Student Book page 35) Launch the Activity: The activity doesn’t take much introduction. You may choose to draw or demonstrate making 4 squares with 13 toothpicks so that students are clear about what they are counting. Then have them start the Exploration. 4 squares What if... What if students try to build the row of 10 or 20 squares to answer problems 4 and 5? Some may try to build all 20 squares. Let them do it (although they’ll probably run out of toothpicks). Students will probably get tired of building squares before they reach 100 squares. That’s the point – direct exploration is great, but you do need more structure and organization when you start to generalize. Ask: “Can you describe what’s going on without having to build every single square?” What if students can only express the relationship “add 3 to the number of toothpicks before it” and so can’t write an algebraic expression? First of all, acknowledge that the recursive definition (“you keep adding 3 toothpicks”) is exactly right and mathematically important (computer programmers often use this kind of thinking). For students who only see the recursive nature of the pattern, ask “Now how do you use that to find the number of toothpicks in 10 squares?” Discussing Student Findings: Invite students to share their written descriptions for problem 7. The Answer Key includes four different possible descriptions. All of them are mathematically interesting: • “It’s one more than 3 times the number of squares” may come from a student who only looked at the numbers, or from a student who considered the first toothpick to start the chain, and saw the first square as adding 3 T4 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line toothpicks to that initial toothpick. Teacher Tips • “You add 3 toothpicks to the number you had last time” may at first seem incomplete, but At this point in the year, students may not generate an is a nice recursive explanation of the pattern, algebraic expression on their own. The process outlined in and touches upon the main point of the this Exploration is called “Guess-Check-Generalize” and pattern having a constant rate of change. will be revisited many times over the year. The important • “You need four for the first square, but only part of this Exploration is that they have the expreince of three extra for each square after that” uses the describing repeated reasoning. As they find the number of language of considering the initial value (4), toothpicks it takes to make 5, 6, 10, 20, and 100 squares, then the constant rate of change (3). make sure they see that the answer is not as important as • “4 for each square minus 1 for each square being able to describe the process for finding it. after the first one” may come from a student who understands needing to multiply the number of squares by 4 since a square has four sides, and then modifying the squares based on their shared sides. Use the shared verbal descriptions to have a discussion about ways to translate the verbal descriptions into algebraic expressions. Depending on your class, you may have a productive discussion by asking students to show how they translated their verbal descriptions into algebraic expressions. Or you may assume the role of the “native speaker” in the class to demonstrate how to translate each description into algebra. Show students, for example, how 3n + 1 is directly related to the description “3 times the number of squares, then add 1.” Then have a discussion about how different interpretations of the pattern can lead to expressions that can all be shown to be equivalent. Teacher Tips Students may also have other descriptions and corresponding algebraic expressions. For example, a student may have reasoned “To make 20 squares, I add 16 squares to the original 4. Each of those 16 squares takes 3 toothpicks. So 20 squares takes 13 + 16(3) toothpicks. In the same way, s squares would take 13 + (s – 4)(3) toothpicks.” Note also that the recursive expression wasn’t provided in the Answer Key, but should certainly be accepted as a correct answer: f(0) = 1; f(n) = f(n – 1) + 3 for n ≥ 1. Further Exploration: In problems 9-11, students consider the problem in reverse: given the number of toothpicks, how many squares in a row can be built? Each of these questions ask about a number of toothpicks for which you can build a row of squares without having any toothpicks left over. You may also modify this question to ask about other numbers of toothpicks with the additional question: “How many toothpicks will be left over?” Or you might ask students to generalize a process for finding the number of squares given t toothpicks (and finding how many toothpicks are left over in that case). Problem 12 of the Further Exploration asks students extend the reasoning from the original Exploration to a slightly different shape. Encourage students to describe the relationship between problem 12 and the original Exploration. Exploration: Toothpick Rows T5 Exploration: Toothpick Rows Make a row of squares with toothpicks as in the picture below. How many toothpicks does it take to build a row of 4 squares? 1 13 toothpicks 4 squares 2 4 5 6 2 T6 Find out how many toothpicks are necessary for rows of various sizes. Record them in this table. Squares Toothpicks 1 4 2 7 3 10 4 13 5 16 6 19 3 Describe a relationship between the number of squares and the number of toothpicks. Responses will vary. At this stage, either of these interpretations is fine: Every time you add a square, you add three toothpicks. or The number of toothpicks is 1 more than three times the number of squares. How many toothpicks does it take to build a row of 10 squares? Describe how you can figure this out without building the whole row. It takes 31 toothpicks. Responses will vary. Students may continue the pattern of adding 3 toothpicks each for 7, 8, 9, and 10 squares. Or students may reason that to make 10 squares, you have to build 4 more squares, needing 12 more toothpicks. Or students may figure out that to make the row, you can place 1 toothpick, then add 3 toothpicks for every square, needing 3(10) + 1 toothpicks. How many toothpicks does it take to build a row of 20 squares? Describe how you can figure this out without building the row of squares. It takes 61 toothpicks. Responses will vary. Students may continue the pattern of adding 3 toothpicks. Or students may reason that it takes 31 toothpicks to make 10 squares so to build 10 more squares requires 30 more toothpicks. Or students may figure out that the row takes 3(20) + 1 toothpicks (after the first toothpick, each square is made with 3 more toothpicks. Or students may see that doubling the number of squares uses one less than double the number of toothpicks. How many toothpicks does it take to build a row of 100 squares? Describe how you figured this out. It takes 301 toothpicks. Responses will vary. Students may reason that building a row uses one toothpick plus 3 toothpicks per square, so 100 toothpicks uses 3(100) + 1 toothpicks. Or students may add 240 toothpicks (3 toothpicks for 80 squares) to the result for 20 squares. Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line 7 8 If someone tells you the number of squares they want to make, how would you describe how many toothpicks they will need? Responses will vary. Possible responses include: “It’s one more than 3 times the number of squares” or “You add 3 toothpicks to the number you had last time.” or “You need four for the first square, but only three extra for each square after that.” or “4 for each square minus 1 for each square after the first one.” How many toothpicks does it take to build a row of s squares? Responses will vary. Students might provide a verbal description or an algebraic expression. “Multiply the number of squares by 3 and add 1” or 3s + 1 or 4 + 3(s – 1) or 4s – (s – 1) Further Exploration 9 If you build a row with 25 toothpicks, then how many squares will it have? 25 toothpicks will build a row of 8 squares. 10 If you build a row with 40 toothpicks, then how many squares will it have? Describe how you figured this out. 40 toothpicks will build a row of 13 squares. Responses will vary. Put 1 toothpick down, then the remaining 39 toothpicks will make 13 squares. Subtract 1 from 40, then divide by 3. 11 If you build a row with 100 toothpicks, then how many squares will it have? Describe how you figured this out. 100 toothpicks will build a row of 33 squares. Responses will vary. Put 1 toothpick down, then the remaining 99 toothpicks will make 33 squares. Subtract 1 from 100, then divide by 3. Or, use the response to problem 10 and reason that the 60 additional toothpicks will make 20 more squares. 12 Suppose you build a row of rectangles as shown below. How many toothpicks does it take to build a row of r rectangles? 5 rectangles Exploration: Toothpick Rows Exploration: Toothpick Rows It takes 4r + 2 toothpicks to build a row of r rectangles. Other ways to write this expression include: 6 + 4(r – 1) or 6s – 2(s – 1) “Multiply the number of rectangles by 4 and add 2.” 3 T7 Exploration: Color Towers 2 Purpose Students explore a variation of the Color Towers Exploration from Unit 1. In Unit 1, students looked for all the possible arrangements for a tower of a certain height built with two colors, for which exactly two of the blocks are one color and the rest are another color. In this Exploration, students are told to build as many towers of a certain height as possible from two colors. Students are led through a systematic process for organizing their answers as an example of how to use an organized solution to describe and make predictions about general patterns. Exploration at a Glance Preparation: Each group needs about 30 blocks: 15 of one color, and 15 of another color. You might use LEGOs, stacking cubes, or even just squares of paper. Mental Mathematics: (5 min) See pages XX-XX of the TTA Mental Mathematics book. Launch: (10 min) • Pose the question, “Using two colors, how many towers can we make that are 2 stories tall?” Student Exploration and Discussion: (30 min) • Provide time for students to explore on their own. • Discuss students’ predictions and organization strategies. Unit 2 Related Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo (See Teacher Guide page T59 and Student Book page 35) Launch the Activity: Before students turn to page 4 in the Student Book, show them that you have two different colors of blocks and ask, “Using these two colors, how many different towers can we make that are 2 stories tall?” The four possible towers are shown at the top of the Student Book page. What if... What if students don’t understand the organizational scheme in problem 2? First, examine the students’ response to problem 1 to understand how they have organized their towers and help them see how they can craft an alternate explanation for the fact that the number of possible towers has doubled. It may also help students to compare the organizational scheme to putting words in alphabetical order. This comparison might help students to see that this way of organizing the tower possibilities will capture all possibilities, and will help to order them. Discussing Student Findings: Invite students to share their prediction and their reasoning from problem 4. The prediction is less important than the reasoning. Listen for students who have made sense of the doubling pattern. You may hear responses like: • “There are 8 possible 3-story towers. Now imagine adding a blue block to the bottom of all 8 towers. That’s 8 different 4-story towers. Now replace that blue block with a green block. That gives 8 more 4-story towers. None of those towers are the same, because we know the top three blocks all made different combinations, and T8 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line that last block will either be blue or green. So there are 16 possible 4-story towers.” • “I listed them out in a tree diagram. The first block is either blue or green. Then you can add either a blue or green block to each of those, so the second level has 4 possibilities. Then draw 2 branches out from all of those, and you get your 8 3-story towers. Finally, draw 2 branches out from each of those possibilities, and you get 16 possible 4-story towers.” Then discuss problem 5 by asking students to describe how they organized their responses. Make sure every student has an idea for how to write an answer (whether or not they are successful at writing all 16 possible arrangements). Further Exploration: Problem 6 asks students to extend the pattern to 5 blocks. If students have made sense of the doubling pattern, then they just need to double their response from problem 5. Some students may also make the connection that they can find the number of possible arrangements for the 5-story tower by finding 25. Problem 7 gives students a sense of how quickly the number of possible arrangements grows, while also asking students to extend the pattern in the same way. In problem 8, students may approach the problem by building towers, by listing possible arrangments, or by making a hypothesis about three-color towers by extending their reasoning for two-color towers. Encourage students to make and test further hypotheses about how the number of colors and the number of stories affects the number of possible arrangements of towers in general. Exploration: Color Towers 2 T9 Exploration: Color Towers 2 You have two piles of blocks, one blue and one green. Here are all four ways you can arrange these colors to make a tower that is exactly B B G G 2 blocks tall: B 1 G B G How many different ways can you arrange two colors to make a tower that is exactly 3 blocks tall? This space is for experimenting. You may not need all the towers. Organize your solution in a sensible way here. B B B B G G G G B B G G B B G G B G B G B G B G This is only one of many possible ways to organize the solutions. One possible way to explain the growth of this pattern is to examine how adding a block changes the problem. For example, here’s a way to think about how adding one block changed the 2-story tower into a 3-story tower. 2 4 T10 These towers have These towers BG have the _______ the BB 2-story tower at the top. 2-story tower at the top. B B B B B B G G B G B G These towers These towers have ________________ have the GG ________________ GB 2-story the ____________ 2-story tower ________________ tower at the ________________ at the top. top. ________________ ________________ G G G G B B G G B G B G Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line 3 Explain the connection between the number of 2-story towers and the number of 3-story towers. 4 Using two colors, there are ______ ways to build a 2-story tower. (how many?) adding a block Every 3-story tower can be built from a 2-story tower by _________________. 2 There are only ______ possible colors that the third block can be. That means there are twice as many possible 3-story towers as there are 2-story towers. 8 So there are ______ possible ways to build a 3-story tower using two colors. 4 Make a prediction. How many different 4-story towers do you think you can make with two colors? Describe the reasoning you used to make your prediction. Responses will vary. Students may extend the reasoning by realizing that since the fourth block can only be one of two colors, there are 16 different 4-story towers. 5 Check your prediction by showing all the different ways you can arrange two colors to make a tower that is exactly 4 blocks tall? Organize your solution in a sensible way. This is only one of many possible ways to organize the solutions: BBBB BBBG BBGB BBGG BGBB BGBG BGGB BGGG GBBB GBBG GBGB GBGG GGBB GGBG GGGB GGGG Every 4-story tower can be built from a 3-story tower by... You can draw your own towers, or you can use abbreviations like BGGB to show the order of the colors in a tower. Further Exploration 6 How many different ways can you arrange two colors to make a tower that is exactly 5 blocks tall? 32 ways 7 Using two colors, there are 1024 ways to build a tower that is 10 blocks tall. How many different ways can you arrange two colors to make a tower that is exactly 11 blocks tall? 1024 × 2 = 2048 ways 8 What if you have three colors (blue, green, and yellow)? How many different 2-story towers you can make with three colors? Like 3 × 3 = 9 ways Y G B G Exploration: Color Towers 2 Exploration: Color Towers 2 and so on... BB BG BY GB GG GY YB YG YY 5 T11 Lesson 1: Placing Integers Purpose In this lesson, students place positive and negative integers on the number line and examine and complete number lines drawn at different scales. Students also start to interpret inequality symbols along the number line. This lesson introduces the unit as students use the number line to visually compare distance and order of numbers. Students will see similar problems in Unit 3, Micro-Geography of the Number Line, as they make sense of decimals and fractions on the number line. Lesson at a Glance 1 Preparation: Prepare 36 sticky notes for the Launch. Write the following numbers on sticky notes: -8002, -55, 1 1 1 15, -33.5, 0, 142, 652, 20, 304.5, 1000, 204, 295.5, 250, -552, 152, 743, -555.5, -200, 3902, 13, 11.5, -1, 23.5, 1 1 1 31, 50, -82, 9.5, 80, -80, 162, 9, -21, -610, -8.5, 112, and 14.5. Mental Mathematics: (5 min) See pages XX-XX of the TTA Mental Mathematics book. Launch: (15 min) Thinking Out Loud Dialogue and Zooming In on the Number Line • Perform the Thinking Out Loud dialogue as a class. • Hand out the prepared sticky notes and ask students to place them on a number line marked with a scale of 200 (shown below). • Repeat the sticky note exercise on a number line marked with a scale of 20. As a Class Student Problem Solving and Discussion: (25 min) • Allow students to work through the rest of the Important Stuff and explore additional problems. • Discuss strategies for using given information to fill in number lines. • Discuss using clues with inequalities to determine the order of values on the number line. In Groups As a Class Unit 2 Related Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo (See Teacher Guide page T59 and Student Book page 35) Launch – Thinking Out Loud Dialogue and Zooming in on the Number Line: Write the sequence from problem 1 on the board: 11, 8, 5, 2, ____. Ask three students to read through the dialogue at the board. Make sure they draw a number line and mark on it when prompted. Call on several students to share their thoughts about Lena’s interpretation of the problem using the Pausing to Think box. Then, draw a long line on the board, mark 0 and 1000, and ask students to help draw the rest of the number line from -1000 to 1000, referring back to the dialogue to talk about the placement of negative numbers. Draw the number line with a hash mark every 200 units, as shown below. Draw attention to the symmetry of the marks across 0. Give each student one numbered sticky note, and ask them to place it where it goes on the number line. Some students may get two or more sticky notes to place. Having three or more students up at once helps move this activity along. Resist the urge to correct placement while students are working. I -1000 -800 1 2I -800 I -600 I -400 I -200 15 -55 I 20 0 I 200 I 400 I 600 I 800 I 1000 Some numbers will be too crowded to place properly. Making a “pile” there is correct – at that scale, all of those numbers are correctly placed in about the same location. T12 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Once everyone is done, quickly read off the other numbers, skipping over the “mess” for the moment, and have students decide whether these others are placed correctly. Ask students roughly what numbers the “mess” is between. Remark that you’ll zoom in on that interval to unpack the “mess.” Draw a new number line from -100 to 100 with a hash mark every 20. Make it about as long as the original. Collect only the sticky notes from the original “mess.” Distribute these for students to place on the new “zoomed-in” number line. What if... What if students incorrectly place negatives, such as placing -610 to the right of -600? Offer that “just as 610 is between 600 and 700, -610 is between -600 and -700.” Let them suggest a new place for the number. What if students misread numbers with decimals as whole numbers, such as placing 23.5 at 235? Suggest that “twenty-three point five is just a little more than twentythree, not up in the two hundreds...” and let them suggest a different place to put it. Such errors don’t need extended instruction at this point. Students will naturally gain more skill as the unit progresses. As before, when students finish, have them briefly check the placement of the numbers that are not clustered in the mess. If you feel it would help, you may acknowledge the new mess, and zoom in once more on a -10 to 10 number line to unpack the mess. Student Problem Solving and Discussion: Allow time for students to work together in pairs or small groups on the Important Stuff. Listen for strategies students use to fill in the spaces in problems 7-12, especially if you hear students using methods other than counting or trial-and-error, such as subtraction and then division to find the scale. Problems 17-20 are different from the previous problems and from the launch. This type of problem will return throughout the unit. Students may need support to remember how to read the inequality symbols. Supporting Classroom Discussion Consider using these additional questions with individuals, small groups, or the whole class to stimulate productive mathematical communication: • Which number did you fill in first in problem 6? Some students aren’t in the habit of looking around for a way to enter into a problem; instead, they may try to fill in the spaces in problem 6 by working from left to right, using trial and error. Have students share the insight of recognizing how the marked -2 and -4 give valuable information. • Which number did you fill in first in problems 7, 8, and 9? Have students share how they found the number halfway between 0 and the other marked number and how they used this to fill in the rest. • Which number(s) did you fill in first in problem 10, 11, and 12? The explanation for filling in these spaces is a bit more involved. Some students may have used some form of trial and error, but others may be able to explain how they thought of cutting distances in half to get the scale without guessing. • How did you use the clues in problem 18 to mark A, B, and C on the number line? Invite students to share their process. Use this opportunity to remind students that B < A is read “B is less than A.” • How did you use the clues in problem 19 to mark A, B, and C on the number line? In this case, to solve the problem, a student has to dive in and mark at least one of the letters on the number line to be able to mark the location of the other letters relative to the first. If students notice that 0 is not marked, ask them “Does your picture change if I tell you that A is negative? Or if B is positive?” • How did you use the clues in problem 20 to put Adam, Brianna, and Chris in order? Invite students to share their methods, then point out how the same logic can describe a strategy for solving problem 19. Lesson 1: Placing Integers T13 Connections to Algebra Teacher Tips Thinking about the relationship between numbers is an essential part of algebraic thinking. Consider an expression like m + 4, or a relationship like h = m + 4. For students to make sense of such an expression or relationship, they have to make sense of h being 4 more than the number m. A student who doesn’t have the mental image of a distance of 4 on the number line may find it difficult to understand how h = m + 4 is a relationship between two quantities and will only be able to approach these problems with procedures, not intuition and logic. The thinking students do in problems 13-16 will help students think about distances later in the unit and will serve as a framework for thinking about decimals and fractions in Unit 3. Notes: For now, students will use a number’s distance to multiples of 10 to find the total distance between -43 and -92. 2 I I -92 -90 7 I I -50 -43 In Unit 3, students will find distances with decimals and fractions. I 0.08 3.92 I 3 85 T14 40 6 I 4 I 0.4 10 2 5 1 5 7 I 10.4 I I I 9 16 16 5 1 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line 2-1 Placing Integers Important Stuff 1 Try imagining a number line. -1 Find a pattern and write the number that comes next: 11, 8, 5, 2, _____ Thinking Out Loud Michael , Lena, and Jay are working on problem 1. Michael: Is it a negative or a fraction? Maybe it’s a decimal. Something’s got to change... Lena: Yeah, something’s going to change. The numbers go down by 3, so will it be 2 minus 3? Pausing to Think What does Lena mean by “the numbers go down by 3”? I pictured it on a number line. (Jay draws a number line and marks 11, 8, 5, and then 2.) Jay: I I I I I I I 2 I I I I 5 I I 8 I 11 Then I counted down 3 more and got to... Michael: Oh, I know! Look: 1, 0, -1. We subtracted three so many times we went below zero! (Michael fills in a few more numbers on the number line to show how he got to -1.) I 2 I I I I -1 0 1 2 I I I I I I 5 I I 8 I 11 Finish labeling this number line to help you answer the problems below. I I I I I -11 -10 -9 -8 -7 I -6 I I I I I -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 I 0 3 -3 , _____ -5 , _____ -7 Find three more numbers for this pattern: 5, 3, 1, -1, _____ 4 -10 Find a pattern and write the number that comes next: 2, -2, -6, _____ 5 -1 _____ 2 Complete this pattern in a sensible way: -10, -7, -4, _____, 6 This number line is marked using a different scale. Finish labeling it in a consistent way. I -22 I -20 6 Lesson 1: Placing Integers I I I I I I I -18 -16 -14 -12 -10 -8 -6 I 1 I I 2 3 Often, we use regularly spaced markings on a number line (every half, every one, or every five or ten) depending on the scale. I -4 I -2 I I I 0 2 4 I 6 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line T15 These number lines all have regular markings. Watch for different scales, and finish labeling the marks on these lines. 7 9 11 I -10 I 0 I I -16 I 0 I I 20 10 -12 I -8 -4 I I I 25 50 75 I I 0 8 30 I I 0 10 I 100 12 I I 6 3 I -15 I I -28 -32 I 9 12 I I 0 5 I -20 I I -5 -10 I I I -24 -16 Using a number line, you establish the order of the numbers (from least to greatest) and can mark distances. For example, this one diagram shows that the number • 53 comes between 50 and 60 (that’s 50 < 53 < 60) • 53 is 3 more than 50 (that’s 53 = 50 + 3) • and 53 is 7 less than 60 (53 = 60 – 7) 3 7 I I I 50 53 60 Place each target number between its closest multiples of 10. Show how far away it is from each multiple of 10. The results should look like the diagram above. Problem 13 is partially done for you. 13 4 Target: -36 6 14 1 Target: 71 9 I I I I I I -40 -36 -30 70 71 80 Mark number lines from least to greatest. 15 Target: -18 2 I 8 I 16 -20 -18 Target: 117 I I -10 110 7 3 I I 117 120 Use the clues to mark one possible location each for A, B, and C so they are in the correct order. 17 Clue 1: A is negative. Clue 2: B is positive. Clue 3: C is greater than B. I A I I 0 B I T16 Clue 1: A is negative. Clue 2: B < A Clue 3: C is not negative. I C Since all you know is that A is negative, you may pick any negative place. Lesson 1: Placing Integers 18 B 20 I A I 0 I C 19 Clue 1: A > B Clue 2: A > C Clue 3: C < B I C I B I A Adam is older than Brianna; Adam is older than Chris; Chris is younger than Brianna. List them in order from youngest to oldest. Youngest: Chris; Middle: Brianna; Oldest: Adam 7 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Stuff to Make You Think Finish labeling the marks on these lines in a consistent way. 21 23 I -15 I 0 I 15 I I 140 160 I 180 I I 30 45 I 22 I 220 200 I I I 28 35 I -18 24 42 I 49 I 56 I I I -14 -10 -6 I -2 Place each target number between its closest multiples of 10. Then zoom out and place the integer between its closest multiples of 100. Write in the distances. Problems 25 and 26 are partially done for you. 25 2 Target: 362 Between 10’s I 8 I I 360 362 Between 100’s 370 62 38 I 300 26 I I 360 362 I 370 6 Target: -124 Between 10’s Between 100’s -200 Target: 413 3 Between 10’s I 410 Between 100’s 13 400 Lesson 1: Placing Integers -124 I I -120 -124 I -100 7 I I 413 420 87 I I 410 420 413 8 I -120 24 I -130 I I 76 I I 4 I -130 27 I 400 I 500 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line T17 28 Target: -981 1 9 Between 10’s I I -981 -980 -990 Between 100’s 81 19 I -990 -980 -981 -1000 29 I I I I I -900 What number is 4 away from -60 and 6 away from -70? 30 -64 31 -11 32 48 8 = ______ What number is 9 away from -20 and is greater than -20? 4 = ______ 3 = ______ 48 7 = ______ 2 = ______ 6 = ______ Tough Stuff A, B, C, D, and E are numbers. Use the clues to mark them in the correct order on the number line. 33 Clue 1: C is negative. Clue 2: B < C Clue 3: A < E < D Clue 4: A is positive. I B 35 I C 34 I 0 I A I E I D Clue 1: A < C < B Clue 2: E > B Clue 3: C < D Clue 4: B > D I A I C I D I B I E Make Your Own: On this number line, mark the positions of A, B, C, D, and E in any order you like. Then write a set of clues about the order you picked. Responses will vary. Lesson 1: Placing Integers T18 9 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Additional Practice A Finish labeling this number line in a consistent way. I I I -6 -4 -2 I 0 I I I I 2 4 6 8 I 10 I I I I I 12 14 16 18 20 B 4 , _____ 0 , _____, -4 _____, -8 _____ -12 Find five more numbers that continue this pattern: 20, 16, 12, 8, _____ C 6 , 4, _____ 2 , _____ 0 , _____ -2 , -4 , _____ -6 Fill in numbers that continue this pattern: 12, 10 , 8, _____ Finish labeling the marks on these lines in a consistent way. D I I 0 -6 F H I -11 I 6 I I -9 -10 I 12 I 18 I I -8 -7 I 0 7 I I -120 -90 E G I I 14 I -60 I I 21 28 I I 0 -30 This number line has yet another scale. Finish labeling it to help you answer the problems below. I -45 I I I I I I I I -40 -35 -30 -25 -20 -15 -10 -5 I 0 I I 10 5 I I I 15 20 25 I -5 , -15, _____ -25 , _____ -35 , -45 Fill in numbers that continue this pattern in a consistent way: 15, 5, _____ J 15 , 0, _____ -15 , _____ -30 , -45 Fill in numbers that continue this pattern: 30, _____ Place each target number between its closest multiples of 10. Show how far away it is from each one. K M 8 Target: 68 2 6 Target: -24 L I I I I I 60 68 70 -30 1 Target: 41 9 I I I 40 41 -20 7 3 I I 50 I -24 Target: -73 N 4 -80 -73 I -70 Finish labeling these number lines in a consistent way. O I -500 P I I -450 -400 I I I I -350 -300 -250 -200 I I I I I -44 -40 -36 -32 -28 10 Lesson 1: Placing Integers I -24 I I I I I 50 -150 -100 -50 0 I I I I I -20 -16 -12 -8 -4 I 0 I I I 100 150 200 I I 4 8 I 12 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line T19 Lesson 2: Operations with Integers Purpose Students examine addition and subtraction in a way that uses the number line and that also supports algebraic thinking by placing the focus on the quantity of the sum or difference rather than on the calculation used to find them. This allows students to focus on the logic of the operations and how the operations affect the values of the results. Lesson at a Glance Preparation: Prepare two identical sets of sticky notes each with the numbers 38, 39, 80, 81, 13, 15, 76, 78, 129, 130, 246, and 247. As a Class Mental Mathematics: (5 min) See pages XX-XX of the TTA Mental Mathematics book. Launch: (15 min) Balance In Groups Student Problem Solving and Discussion: (25 min) • Students should work through the Important Stuff and explore additional problems. • Use the discussion questions in the Student Book to give students the opportunity to share their observations. • Discuss how turning to the number line can be a strategy for making sense of addition and subtraction problems with numbers or algebraic expressions. As a Class Unit 2 Related Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo (See Teacher Guide page T59 and Student Book page 35) Launch – Balance: Draw two empty mobile beams on the board. Ask for two volunteers (or two teams of two students each) to come forward to compete in a quick game. You will hand each volunteer (or each team) four sticky notes, and their job is to hang all four sticky notes on the mobile so that the mobile balances. Give the first two volunteers (or teams) the numbers 38, 39, 80, and 81. You will likely 38 39 see teams show the correct grouping (38 with 81 and 39 with 80) or a common incorrect 81 80 grouping that groups 38 with 80 and 39 with 81. Ask each team to briefly explain how they came up with their answer. Ask both teams, even if they are both correct or both incorrect. If only one team got the correct answer, ask them to explain first, in order to give the other team the opportunity to see Teacher Tips and correct their response. Unfortunately, speed in mathematics is often Listen for ideas like: “I put 80 and 81 on different strings taken as a sign of ability. Speed is not the point because if they were on the same string, that side would of this game. The only reason this game is be too heavy,” “39 goes with 80 because 39 is heavier than designed as a competition is because, in this 38 and 80 is ligher than 81,” “Once I put the 80’s and 30’s case, the speed factor will likely push students together, I added the ones digits and saw that 1 + 8 is the away from calculating a sum, and towards same as 0 + 9.” looking for interesting features of the numbers, Call up a second set of volunteers (or teams) to do the such as relative magnitude. same with the numbers 13, 15, 76, and 78. Again, ask for T20 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line brief explanations. Repeat with the numbers 129, 130, 246, and 247. If students are getting a lot out of the activity, consider making more sticky notes of a similar nature and play more rounds at the end of class, after students have worked on the problems in the Student Book. Finally, draw a number line from 4 to 14 on the board. Draw two arrows coming up from 9 and leading to a box, and ask students to add 9 + 9, and put 18 in the box. 18 + 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Then draw two more arrows coming up from 8 and 10, respectively, leading to another box. Ask students for the sum, and place it in the box. 18 18 4 5 6 7 8 + 9 10 11 12 13 14 If students seem to understand how the picture works, ask them to turn to Lesson 2-2 in their Student Books, where they can complete problem 1. Student Problem Solving and Discussion: Allow time for students to work together in pairs or small groups on the Important Stuff. Use problems 14 and 15 in the Discuss & Write What You Think box to start discussion about ways to think flexibly about addition and subtraction by using a visual representation of the sum or difference instead of performing a calculation. Supporting Classroom Discussion These questions ask students to think about how they might use visual models for addition and subtraction: • Out of the pictures in problems 5, 6, and 7, which picture of addition do you like the most? Why? • If you are asked to picture the sum 49 + 81, what picture comes to mind? How does having the visual image help you find the sum? If a student’s answer for the picture that comes to mind is different from the picture they like the most, this may be a sign that the student is using these visual tools strategically. • If you want to draw a number line picture for the difference 91 – 59, what would you draw? How would you use the number line to come up with a difference that is easier to find? Students might see that 91 – 59 = 90 – 58 or 92 – 60, and students may express preference for one form over another. Algebraic Habits of Mind: Using Tools Strategically You don’t want students to think of using the number line as a “new” or “right” way of adding and subtracting. But at the same time, it is helpful to help students develop the strategy of using a visual tool to aid them, especially with mental calculations. Mentally calculating 39 + 41 requires more working memory than picturing 39 + 41 as a sum that “surrounds” 40 + 40, and having that visual image can increase accuracy. Unfortunately, students—especially those who struggle—tend to latch onto particular methods as the “best way” to solve a problem instead of thinking about what will work best in each situation. Communicate to students that any tool should be used strategically, and a large part of thinking mathematically is to judge whether a tool is useful for a given situation. Students who work to make sense of problems in this way will find that they are more confident about solutions. Lesson 2: Operations with Integers T21 Connections to Algebra In Lesson 6, students will use algebra to show that the addition pattern on the number line shown in problem 1 works the same way for any integer at the center of the arrows. In this lesson, students work first with numbers in order to gain familiarity with the pattern and to begin to form ideas for how to justify the pattern before using algebra. Even though the materials don’t make the connection explicit, throughout this lesson students are using the associative, commutative, and distributive properties. Here are some examples. Find a. 59 + 23 = 60 + a 59 + 23 = (59 + 1) + a 59 + 23 = 59 + (1 + a) 59 + (1 + 22) = 59 + (1 + a) So a = 22 Find b. 90 – 51 = 87 – b 90 – 51 = (90 – 3) – b 90 – 51 = 90 – 3 – b 90 – 51 = 90 – (3 + b) 90 – (3 + 48) = 90 – (3 + b) So b = 48 Again, students don’t formally write down this process and would likely find it difficult to understand these steps as they are written here. But the reasoning students use through their own intuition leads them through each equivalence, and it is this algebraic thinking that is the goal of the lesson. Notes: T22 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line 2-2 Operations with Integers Important Stuff 1 18 In each box, put the sum of the numbers that point to it. 18 18 18 18 18 4 5 6 7 + 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Try to figure out whether these mobiles are balanced without doing the addition on either side. If they are balanced, fill in = in the expression below. If they are not balanced, circle the heavier side, and fill in the expression with < or > . 2 63 ? 37 63 + 37 5 3 If you think first, you can do these without calculating. 65 37 < 65 + 37 n 28 30 Think first, and you can do this with almost no calculation at all! 43 + 28 = n + 30 n= 7 74 51 + 74 Find the weight of n that makes the mobile balance. 43 51 41 ? = 4 50 123 75 94 50 + 75 123 + 94 ? 120 95 > 120 + 95 Discuss & Write What You Think 6 Luis drew this picture to make sense of problem 5. Explain how he can use it to find n. 43 n 28 30 Responses will vary. Sample: The total row lengths are equal since 43 + 28 is equal to n + 30. Since 30 is two larger than 28, the picture shows that n must be two smaller than 43. So n is 41. Ayana drew this picture to make sense of problem 5. Explain how she can use it to find n. this equals that 28 30 Lesson 2: Operations with Integers Lesson 2: Operations with Integers + n 43 Responses will vary. Sample: The number line picture shows that since 30 is 2 more than 28, the number n must be 2 less than 43 in order for the sums to be equal. So n is 41. 11 T23 The green line shows another number line relationship: it connects numbers whose difference is 4. Here, the green line connects 1 and 5 because 5 – 1 = 4. There are more possible Draw three more lines that connect numbers that differ by 4. 8 lines than are drawn here. 5 – 1 = 4 I -3 I -2 I -1 I 0 I 1 I 2 I 3 I 4 I 5 I 6 I -90 I -80 I -70 I -60 I -50 I -40 I -30 I -20 I -10 I 0 Figure out the value of the variable using the number line, not by subtracting. 10 52 – 19 = a – 20 a= 11 I I 52 I I b 37 34 I 9 I 10 I 11 53 I 80 I 83 I 10 I 20 I 30 I 40 I 50 Algebraic Habits of Mind: Using Tools Strategically Using the number line is not a “new way” to add and subtract numbers. It is just another way to think about sums and differences and make sense of them. One way to use the number line strategically is to 487 – 290 = c – 300 c= I 20 Number lines aren’t always precise about exact spacing, but the order always has to be correct. 83 – 37 = 80 – b b= 12 53 I 19 I 8 There are more possible lines than are drawn here. 50 – 0 = 50 Here’s a line between numbers whose difference is 50. Draw three more lines that connect numbers that differ by 50. 9 I 7 I I 290 300 497 I 487 I look for a relationship between c the order of numbers and the result you get when you add or 13 8000 – d = 7998 – 179 d= 181 I 179 I d I I subtract them. 7998 8000 Discuss & Write What You Think 14 If we’re told that 77 + m = 80 + 43, explain how you can find m without adding 80 + 43 first. Responses will vary. Sample: The two sides balance. 80 is 3 heavier than 77, so, to make up for it, m must be 3 heavier than 43. So m must be 46. 12 T24 15 If we know that 94 – 75 = 92 – x, explain how to find x without ever figuring out what 94 – 75 is. Responses will vary. Sample: The distance between 94 and 75 is the same as the distance between 92 and x. Since 92 is 2 less than 94, x must be 2 less than 75, so x is 73. Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Stuff to Make You Think 16 Clue: A + B = C + D. Mark the location of D. I A 18 19 I C I D 17 Clue: A – B = C – D. Mark the location of D. I B I B I I A D Find the missing values by considering how the numbers on each side of the equation balance each other, not by adding the numbers in the problem. 72 + a = 73 + 49 50 a = __________ 84 + 66 = b + 85 65 b = __________ 257 + 4528 = 255 + c c = __________ I C Consider drawing a picture to go with the problem. 4530 Make up two similar addition problems and give them to a classmate to solve. Responses will vary. 20 21 Find the missing values without subtracting the numbers in the problem. 164 – 72 = d – 73 165 d = __________ 87 – e = 90 – 59 62 e = __________ 9249 – 381 = f – 380 9250 f = __________ This time, a drawing mi ght look like this: Make up two similar subtraction problems and give them to a classmate to solve. Responses will vary. Lesson 2: Operations with Integers Lesson 2: Operations with Integers 13 T25 22 23 42 3 = ______ 7 = ______ 60 9 = ______ 5 = ______ 2 = ______ 3 = ______ Tough Stuff 24 There’s a way you can find the sum of all the integers from 1 to 10 without doing all the adding! The two pictures suggest slightly different ways to figure out the sum without adding all the numbers. Find the sum using whichever picture you find more convenient and explain how the picture shows a shorter way of adding 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5 + 6 + 7 + 8 + 9 + 10. 10 10 10 10 + 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 11 11 11 11 1 25 2 3 4 5 + 6 7 8 9 10 Responses will vary. Sample: Both pictures show that the sum of the integers from 1 to 10 is 55. Picture 1: 4(10) + 10 + 5 = 55 Picture 2: 5(11) = 55 Both pictures take advantage of the fact that you can add the ten numbers in any order, so we can choose pairs of numbers that give the same sum to reduce the amount of information to keep track of. Imagine or draw a similar picture to find the sum of all the integers from 1 to 20. Adjust the pictures to show 1 to 20: Picture 1: 9(20) + 20 + 10 = 210 Picture 2: 10(21) = 210 Both show that the sum of the integers from 1 to 20 is 210. 14 T26 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Additional Practice Try to figure out whether these mobiles are balanced without doing the addition on either side. If they are balanced, write = in the box. If they are not balanced, circle the heavier side and fill in the box with < or >. A 71 ? 99 71 + 99 B = 70 213 100 36 70 + 100 213 + 36 ? < C 38 58 215 93 38 + 215 ? 60 90 58 + 93 > 60 + 90 Fill in the blank spaces in each picture so that each one shows a way to picture 63 + 89 = n + 90. D G E 63 n 89 90 63 89 n 90 F this equals that 63 n 62 All three pictures show that n = _______ + 89 90 Find the weight of the variable that will make mobile balance. H I J 79 m 812 p 1000 b 41 40 97 100 77 998 79 + 41 = m + 40 812 + 97 = p + 100 1000 + 77 = b + 998 80 m = _______ 809 p = _______ 79 b = _______ Find the value of each variable by drawing on the number line, not by subtracting. K 63 – 29 = c – 30 I 29 64 c = _______ L 200 – n = 199 – 85 2000 – w = 2003 – 349 346 w = _______ Additional Practice Lesson 2: Operations with Integers I 63 I I 85 n 86 n = _______ M I 30 I w I 349 I c I I 199 200 I I 2000 2003 15 T27 Lesson 3: Checkers and Who Am I? Puzzles Purpose By using black and red checkers to represent positive and negative integers, students make sense of adding and subtracting positive and negative numbers. Students are also introduced to Who Am I? puzzles in which they interpret and use multiple clues to determine a mystery number. Lesson at a Glance Preparation: • Prepare red and black checkers. Have at least 5-10 of each color to use at the board (either physical or virtual pieces that the whole class can see). You may also find it helpful to have extra checkers for students to use at their desks as they solve problems. • Prepare to project the three-digit Who Am I? puzzle on page T31. • Photocopy the Snapshot Check-in on page T72. Mental Mathematics: (5 min) See pages XX-XX of the TTA Mental Mathematics book. As a Class Launch: (15 min) Who Am I? Puzzle and Checkers Introduction Student Problem Solving: (15 min) Students should work through the Important Stuff and explore additional problems. Reflection and Assessment: (10 min) Snapshot Check-in In Groups As a Class Unit 2 Related Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo (See Teacher Guide page T59 and Student Book page 35) Launch – Who Am I? Puzzle and Checkers Introduction: Tell students they are about to solve a puzzle together in which they figure out a three-digit mystery number. Project the puzzle on page T31 or write these clues so all students can see them. Who Am I? h t u • I am even. • My digits are all different. • I am greater than 319. • My hundreds digit is less than 7. • u = 1 + h • My tens digit is my largest digit. • My hundreds digit is my only odd digit. • My units digit is one more than my hundreds digit. • The sum of all three of my digits is 19. • My units digit is not 4. T28 (The answer is 586) Algebraic Habits of Mind: Puzzling and Persevering Persevering means hanging in there even when the going is tough. But problem solving isn’t just about tackling the tough stuff. Good problem solvers often start by looking for the easiest clues or ideas to use. Then when they’ve used up the easy clues, they see what else they can do. Teacher Tips Explain that just like letters are used to spell words, digits are used to “spell” numbers. We’re just looking for the individual digits that spell the number. Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Let the spirit be playful: they’re detectives solving a mystery. The clues are intentionally not labeled because they should not be considered in order. If students suggest it, label the clues (a-j) so they are easier to refer to. Let students examine the clues quietly on their own for 30 seconds, then let them start to offer ideas about how to solve the puzzle. As the class works together, set a rule: You may only share one new idea on your turn. For example, if a clue says “My units digit is a perfect square,” a student can say, “That tells me the units digit is a 0, 1, 4, or 9.” They cannot go on to say “... and also, since another clue says ‘I am odd,’ the units digit must be 1 or 9.” That comment must be left for another student! This can be difficult, but the goal is to get all your students involved and contributing. Algebraic Habits of Mind: Puzzling and Persevering Who Am I? puzzles are great for encouraging students to find entry points into problems and for helping them organize information. They encourage students to move away from asking “What am I supposed to do here?” towards a more sophisticated question: “What can I do?” When helping students, don’t lead them down a certain path. Just keep asking “What do you know?” Then help them keep track of what they’ve figured out. If you have helpers in your classroom or you hear students helping each other, encourage them to take the same approach. This type of social problem solving also forces students to keep track of what they know. If they’re going to build on what they already know, they have to keep track of what’s been said. When students have ideas, ask how to record those ideas. If students are really having trouble, you may suggest writing the digits 0-9 underneath each box and crossing out digits as they are eliminated. But go with student suggestions first since this isn’t always the best way to keep track of the information and so that students can be thinking about how best to organize their thoughts. After solving the Who Am I? puzzle but before students begin solving problems in the Student Book, use checkers to familiarize them with the “game” context of the problems. Black checkers are worth +1 and red checkers are worth -1. In each case, set up the situation or perform the action, and ask the students to find the total score. • Start with 4 black checkers. (Score: 4) -1 1 • Put in 2 red checkers (Score: 2) • Put in 3 more red checkers (Score: -1) • Remove 1 black checker (Score: -2) Continue to put in and remove checkers until students seem to understand the idea of finding the score. Student Problem Solving: Give students time to work together in pairs or small groups on the Important Stuff. Use problems 23 and 24 to check that students have made sense of how to use the checkers to talk about adding and subtracting positive and negative numbers. Supporting Classroom Discussion As students are solving problems, check for student understanding with these questions: • How does putting in (adding) a negative number affect the score? • How does removing (subtracting) a positive number affect the score? • How does removing (subtracting) a negative number affect the score? • Why is removing a negative number like putting in a positive number? • If a score is already negative, what happens if you put in (add) a negative value? • If a score is already negative, what happens if you remove (subtract) a negative value? Lesson 3: Checkers and Who Am I? Puzzles T29 Connections to Algebra m – 5 m – -5 In Lesson 5, students will revisit the idea of adding and subtracting positive and negative values but as represented I I I m + -5 m m + 5 on a number line centered on a variable. When they encounter this general picture of adding or subtracting values to end up to the right or left of the original value, remind them of their work with putting in and removing black and red checkers so that students continue to work with the image of checkers and use the language and the context to help them make sense of calculations. Who Am I? puzzles are also connected to algebra. Each set of clues is a system of equations and inequalities that has a unique solution, and students use deductive reasoning skills to find the solution. Students will encounter clues like u = t (from problem 30) and have to understand that the clue shows a relationship between two unknown digits. The ability to coordinate multiple clues and think flexibly about how to use the clues is a way to train a student to think algebraically. Student Reflections and Snapshot Check-in: Ask students to reflect on their learning by responding to the following prompts: • What are some things you’ve learned so far in this unit? • What questions do you still have? Assess student understanding of the ideas presented so far in the unit with the Snapshot Check-in (on page T72). Use student performance on this assessment to guide students to solve targeted additional practice problems from this or prior lessons as necessary. Notes: T30 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Who Am I? Puzzle Who Am I? h t u •I am even. •My digits are all different. •I am greater than 319. •My hundreds digit is less than 7. •u = 1 + h •My tens digit is my largest digit. •My hundreds digit is my only odd digit. •My units digit is one more than my hundreds digit. •The sum of all three of my digits is 19. •My units digit is not 4. Lesson 3: Checkers and Who Am I? Puzzles T31 2-3 Checkers and Who Am I? Puzzles Important Stuff 1 For the following problems, a black checker is worth 1 point and a red checker is worth -1 point. The total score is found by adding the value of all the checkers. For example, in -1 , the total score is -3. What score is represented in each case? 1 2 -4 5 4 3 7 If the score is negative, are there more black or red checkers in the pile? 6 Red 1 If the score is positive, which color is ahead (has more checkers in the pile), black or red? -6 If the number of black and red checkers in the pile is the same, what is the score? 7 Black 0 Putting checkers in the pile has the effect of adding a positive (black) or negative (red) number to the overall score. Write a calculation for each scenario. 8 Black is ahead by 5. Find the new score if you put in 3 red checkers. 9 2 5 + (-3) = _____ 11 Red is ahead by 6. Put in 3 red checkers. 12 Red is ahead by 1. Put in 3 red checkers. What’s the score? Red’s lead goes up, so red is ahead by 4. The score is -4. 16 10 Red is ahead by 2. Put in 4 black checkers. -2 + 4 = 2 15 Black is ahead by 1. Put in 4 red checkers. 1 + (-4) = -3 -2 -5 + 3 = _____ -6 + (-6) = -12 14 Red is ahead by 5. Put in 3 black checkers. 13 Red is ahead by 3. Put in 4 red checkers. -3 + (-4) = -7 Red is ahead by 1. Take out 3 black checkers. What’s the score? Red is already ahead, and black takes away checkers, so red’s lead goes up further. Red is now ahead by 4. The score is -4. In problems 14 and 15, putting in 3 red checkers has the same effect as removing 3 black checkers. Why do these actions have the same effect on which color is ahead and by how many? Responses will vary. For example: Red is ahead by 1, and adds three red checkers, so red’s lead goes up. Removing three black checkers also means that red’s lead goes up, so it has the exact same effect. In both cases, the amount of change is 3. 16 T32 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Removing checkers from the pile has the effect of subtracting a positive (black) or negative (red) number from the overall score. Write a calculation for each scenario. 17 Black is ahead by 5. Remove 2 black checkers. Black is ahead by 5. Remove 2 red checkers. 18 3 5 – 2 = _____ 20 Red is ahead by 3 Remove 6 black checkers. 7 5 – (-2) = _____ Red is ahead by 7. Remove 3 red checkers. 21 -3 – 6 = -9 23 25 27 29 31 -7 – (-3) = -4 Use checkers to make sense of the calculation -15 + -4. Responses will vary. Sample: In this situation, red is ahead by 15, then we put in 4 more red checkers. The final score is -19. 24 u 8 8 Who Am I? • I am odd. • The sum of my digits is 2. t u 1 1 Who Am I? • I am even. • The sum of my digits is 4. • My units digits is not 2. t u Who Am I? • Both of my digits are odd. • My tens digit is 6 less than my units digit. • I am less than 20. Lesson 3: Checkers and Who Am I? Puzzles Lesson 3: Checkers and Who Am I? Puzzles 26 0 2 4 6 8 28 30 4 0 t u 1 7 Red is ahead by 6. Remove 1 black checker. -6 – 1 = -7 22 Black is ahead by 1. Remove 5 black checkers. 1 – 5 = -4 Use checkers to make sense of the calculation 5 – (-7). Responses will vary. Sample: In this situation, black is ahead by 5, then we remove 7 red checkers. The final score is 12. If it helps, draw checkers and describe your picture to explain the calculation. t Who Am I? • I am even. • The sum of my digits is 16. 19 32 t u Who Am I? • I am even. 3 6 • I am a perfect square. • My units digit is twice my tens digit. Who Am I? • I am a multiple of 10. • I am between 42 and 52. Who Am I? • I am odd. • u=t • The sum of my digits is 6. t u 2 0 t u 3 3 t u Who Am I? • I am a perfect square. 8 1 • The sum of my digits is 9. • My units digit is less than my tens digit. 17 T33 Stuff to Make You Think Use + for and – for Imagine a bucket contains a pile of checkers. The picture of the bucket represents the total value of the checkers inside. If there are more black checkers, the number is positive; if there are more red checkers, the number is negative. Either way, the bucket stands for the unknown number. 33 Words Checker Description Think of a number. Bucket Add -5. Add 5 red Subtract -3. Remove 3 red Subtract your original number. Remove bucket 34 Words Checker Description Think of a number. Bucket Subtract 4. Pictures Jay Eva Abbreviation 7 11 b – – – – – 2 6 b - 5 – – 5 9 b - 2 -2 -2 -2 Ben Carla Abbreviation 20 7 b 16 3 b - 4 – – Pictures – – – – Add 4 red know. You can’t reach into the bucket because you can’t change what you don’t Adding 4 red has the same effect as removing 4 black. 35 Words Checker Description Think of a number. Bucket Pictures Lena Mali Abbreviation 10 21 b Subtract 2. Add 2 red – – 8 19 b - 2 Add -3. Add 3 red – – – – – 5 16 b - 5 – 9 20 b - 1 + + + – + + 14 25 b + 4 4 4 4 Subtract -4. Add 5. Subtract your original number. Remove 4 red Add 5 black Remove bucket + + + + Tough Stuff 36 18 T34 t Who Am I? • I am even. 3 • My units digit is 3t – 1. • I am closer to 30 than I am to 0. u 8 37 Who Am I? • 2t is 5 more than u. • u2 is one less than 50. • 2u is eight more than t. t u 6 7 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Additional Practice A black checker is worth 1 and a red checker is worth -1. The total score is found by adding the value of all the checkers. 1 -1 What score is represented in each case? A B C -1 D 3 -2 4 Putting checkers into the pile has the effect of adding a positive (black) or negative (red) number to the overall score. Write a calculation for each scenario. E Black is ahead by 4. Put in 6 red checkers. F -2 4 + (-6) = _____ Red is ahead by 3. Put in 8 black checkers. G -3 + 8 = 5 Red is ahead by 10. Put in 2 black checkers. -10 + 2 = -8 Removing checkers from the pile has the effect of subtracting a positive (black) or negative (red) number from the overall score. Write a calculation for each scenario. H Black is ahead by 6. Remove 2 red checkers. I 8 6 – (-2) = _____ K Red is ahead by 8. Remove 4 black checkers. -8 – 4 = -12 Use checkers to explain how to make sense of the calculation -9 + -5. L In this situation, red is ahead by 9, then we put in 5 more red checkers. The final score is -14. M O Q t u Who Am I? • Both of my digits are odd. 3 5 • Neither of my digits are perfect squares. • I am one less than a perfect square. t u Who Am I? • The sum of my digits is 9. 4 5 • My tens digit is even. • My tens digit and units digit differ by 1. t Who Am I? • Both of my digits are even. 8 • My digits add to 10. • My tens digit is 6 more than u. Additional Practice Lesson 3: Checkers and Who Am I? Puzzles u 2 J Red is ahead by 4. Remove 5 red checkers. -4 – (-5) = 1 Use checkers to explain how to make sense of the calculation -5 – (-3). In this situation, red is ahead by 5, then we remove 3 red checkers. The final score is -2. N P R Who Am I? • The sum of my digits is 14. • My digits are not the same. • Both my digits are odd. • I am less than 90. t u 5 9 t u 9 9 t Who Am I? • My digits are the same. 7 • The sum of my digits is greater than 12 and less than 16. u Who Am I? • The sum of my digits is 18. 7 19 T35 Lesson 4: Distance and Inequalities Purpose In Lesson 4, students return their focus to the geography of the number line. They use the number line to find and compare distances and learn how to represent an inequality statement on a number line. In both types of problems, students must consider the order and placement of positive and negative numbers as they continue to solidify their mental framework for distance between numbers. Lesson at a Glance Mental Mathematics: (5 min) See pages XX-XX of the TTA Mental Mathematics book. Launch: (15 min) Thinking Out Loud Dialogue and Showing Inequalities • Read and work through the Thinking Out Loud dialogue together as a class. • Ask students to think of a number less than 10, and find a way to represent all the possible numbers less than 10 on a number line. As a Class In Groups Student Problem Solving and Discussion: (25 min) • Allow time for students to work on the problems in the Student Book. • Discuss a way to represent given sets of numbers on the number line. As a Class Unit 2 Related Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo (See Teacher Guide page T59 and Student Book page 35) Launch – Thinking Out Loud Dialogue and Showing Inequalities: Pose problem 1 to the class: Which is longer, the distance from -26 to 59 or the distance from -27 to 62? Ask three students to read through the dialogue at the board. Make sure they draw a number line and mark on it when prompted. Call on other students to share their reseponses to the problems in the Pausing to Think boxes. Check for understanding by asking students to compare the distance between -13 and 92 to the distance between 13 and 92. Ask students to explain their response, listening for explanations that use visual comparison like “-13 must be farther from 92 because -13 is on the other side of 0.” Then draw a number line on the board without any markings. Call up a stream of students to come up and each mark a number that is less than 10. For now, don’t specify how students should mark the numbers. They may just make hash marks or draw dots on numbers. You may end up with a picture that looks something like this: I -3 I 1 I 2 I 4 I 5 I 6 I 7 I 9 After a while, ask, “Just from looking at this picture, could you tell what rule we’re using to make the picture?” Listen for answers that provide reasons for why the picture is insufficient: “No, we haven’t marked all the numbers less than 10,” “No, these numbers are also all less than 20,” “You can’t even tell which numbers are important,” etc. Keep asking for more students to come up and continue to mark numbers that are less than 10. Depending on the points raised in the previous conversation, you might find that more students are using dots to mark their points. If students are only filling in integers, keep asking for students to fill in more and more numbers (without extending the number line) until students start to mark non-integer numbers. Now, the number line might look more like this: T36 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line I -3 I -2 I -1 I 0 I 1 I 2 2.5 I 3 I 4 I 5 I 6 I 7 I 8 8.5 I 9 9.9 Again, ask, “Is this enough information to show anyone that we were only marking numbers less than 10?” Again, listen for responses like “These numbers are also all less than 11 or 20 or 400.” Depending on the conversation, you might respond, “To show that we don’t want numbers that are more than 10, we could use a different mark. Actually, mathematicians have a way to show that we don’t want numbers: an open circle.” You might show some examples. Ask, “What about the number 10?” Mark 10 with an open circle. 2.5 8.5 9.9 12.2 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Ask again, “Now does this picture show clearly that we only want numbers less than 10?” Probe with questions like “What abot 9.95? Does this picture tell us about 9.95?” Or “What about 6.5, or any other number that isn’t marked? Can we assume that those numbers should have been marked, even though they aren’t?” Finally, show students how to indicate inequalities on the number line, while describing the logic of the notation. Emphasize to students that this notation isn’t just about “coloring” or “shading” one side versus the other. The dark line we use to indicate inequalities is actually a way of showing an infinite number of points. This logic will return when students produce graphs on a coordinate grid. Graphs may also represent an infinite number of points. The only specific points that we have to distinguish are at the ends of the line we draw. Off to the left, we use an arrow to show that any point to the left of our drawing is also a solution. At 10, we use an open circle to indicate that, while 10 is not less than 10, 10 is our boundary. I -3 I -2 I -1 I 0 I 1 I 2 I 3 I 4 I 5 I 6 I 7 I 8 I 9 I 10 I 11 I 12 I 13 I 14 I 15 I 16 Ask, one final time, “Now does the picture show clearly that we only want numbers less than 10?” Ask, “Could it possibly mean anything else?” Review with students that this means if p is less than 10, that means p can be located anywhere on the dark line. The point p is a specific point, and the line indicates all the possible locations of p. Therefore, when we use the notation p < 10, we associate it with this picture on the number line. Let students voice concerns or issues and be convinced of how to interpret this notation. Supporting Classroom Discussion Use these questions to check student understanding of the logic of how to indicate solutions on the number line. • How could we show all the numbers that are not 5? I I I I I 5 • How could we show all the positive numbers? Ask: Is 0 positive? I I I 0 I I • How could we show all the numbers that are not positive? I I I 0 I I I I 0 1 • How could we show all the numbers that are less than 5 units away from 0? I 2 I -5 I -5 I 3 I 0 I 0 I 4 I 5 I 5 • How could we show all the numbers that are 2-point-something? • How could we show all the numbers that are more than 5 units away from 0? Lesson 4: Distance and Inequalities T37 Connections to Algebra When considering specific numbers, inequalities may not seem to have much significance. 8 < 10 is a true statement, but the specific relationship doesn’t seem very useful, since there are other ways of relating 8 and 10 that are much more informative. Students might gain some new insights into the nature of a variable by thinking about and discussing the meaning of a statement like b > -2. In this case, it’s possible that b stands for a particular number and we have a clue that b > -2, which limits the possibilities for the identity of that particular number. Or it could be that b is not a specific number but describes a quantity that may vary. In that case, b > -2 may be a description for how b may vary. Students don’t need to be able to examine the nature of a variable in such depth, but having a clear way to describe variables to students will likely help students understand more about algebra. Teacher Tips Whenever students ask for help in drawing inequalities on a number line, go through the process of the launch. If students are graphing n ≥ 5, ask them to name and plot numbers that are greater than or equal to 5 with closed circles and numbers that are less than 5 with open circles. Have them plot more and more and more points until it is possible to see the line that would be drawn to represent n ≥ 5. Repeating this process will help students understand that lines on a graph indicate the location of infinitely many points. Some students may have learned rules like “‘less than’ means shade to the left.” Unfortunately, this procedurebased rule not only obscures understanding of why a person would shade anything at all, but it’s also wrong when representing an inequality like 5 ≤ n. Continue to emphasize logic and sense-making to combat incorrect rules and shortcuts that students may already have. Notes: T38 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line 2-4 Distance and Inequalities Important Stuff 1 (See dialogue for explanation) Which is longer, the distance from -26 to 59 or the distance from -27 to 62? Explain how you know. -27 and 62 Thinking Out Loud Michael , Lena, and Jay are working on problem 1. Lena: Huh... are we supposed to subtract? Like 59 minus -26 is... um... Michael: Wait. If we’re comparing distances, I want to picture it. Let’s draw a number line. Here, I’ll start it: I I -27 -26 Lena: I I I 0 59 62 The way you drew it, the distance between 59 and 62 looks like about 20! Michael: Yeah, fine, but the only thing that matters is the order. Pausing to Think Place the numbers -26 and -27 in the blank spaces. Jay: So, we’re comparing from -26 to 59 (points to both numbers) and from -27 to 62 (points to both). Lena: -27 and 62 Ok, so the longer distance is between ___________________ Michael: That’s the answer... But how do we explain it? Lena: What is there to explain?! We can see which one is longer! Jay: -27 and 62 because of Yeah, so what did we see? The distance has to be longer between _______________ the order of the numbers on the number line. We can see that... Pausing to Think 2 Which way should Jay end his sentence? Choose one. A ... the distance from -26 to 59 fits inside the distance from -27 to 62. B ... the distance from -27 to 62 fits inside the distance from -26 to 59. Algebraic Habits of Mind: Using Tools Strategically You overhear two classmates talking. Jing: Eva: a What’s the distance between -20 and 70? I think it’s 50... No, it can’t be. I’m picturing the number line, and the distance has to be bigger. Show -20 and 70 on the number line. I -20 b (write your answer again here) I 0 What’s the distance between them? 20 Lesson 4: Distance and Inequalities The number line is a tool to show the positions, order, and space between real numbers. Use number lines to make sense of problems that ask about comparing numbers (Greater? Less? In between?) I 70 90 and how far apart they are (How much bigger? What do we have to add? What’s the distance? How did it change?). Drawing a number line may help you organize a problem and see how you might solve it. Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line T39 Show the numbers on the number line, and find the distance between them. 3 25 and 100 I 0 5 -25 and -100 I -100 75 I 75 25 4 -25 and 100 I I I -25 0 100 6 I 25 and -100 I 0 -100 m ea “Think of a number.” 7 The number you think of may be at any one of these specific points. A thick line with arrows shows that any point within that section is acceptable. 8 “Think of a number greater than 3.” I I 3 An open circle ( ) means the number is not allowed. Is the number 3 allowed? No “Think of a number greater than or equal to 3.” I 3 This number line shows n ≥ 3. The number 3 is still the boundary point, but now it is allowed. Lesson 4: Distance and Inequalities T40 9 nt Hi 25 I? Clue: I am less than 300. My name is p. Where am I? Use symbols: Show everywhere I could be. I I 0 I I I I p < 300 I I I 100 200 300 Clue: I am greater than -3. My name is y. Where am I? Use symbols: y > -3 Show everywhere I could be. -3 -2 I -1 I 0 Clue: I am greater than 28. My name is c. Where am I? Use symbols: Show everywhere I could be. I 10 I Wh er Inequality symbols compare numbers. Inequality sentences can be shown visually as sections of the number line. I 100 125 I I -25 0 I 3 A thick line (and the arrow) shows which numbers are allowed. If the number is “n,” then this number line shows n > 3. The number 3 is not “greater than 3” so it’s not allowed. 125 I I 28 I 30 I 1 c > 28 I 32 I 34 Clue: I am less than or equal to -20. My name is n. Where am I? Use symbols: n ≤ -20 Show everywhere I could be. I 11 I I I I I -40 -30 -20 -10 0 Clue: I am greater than or equal to -12. My name is k. Where am I? Use symbols: k ≥ -12 Show everywhere I could be. I I I -12 -9 I -6 I -3 I 0 21 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Stuff to Make You Think Clue 1: I am less than 4. Clue 2: I am greater than or equal to -1. a b c d I? Wh er 12 m ea Place 10 filled circles ( ) on points that are true for both clues. Place 10 open circles ( ) on points that are false for at least one of the clues. Is the number 4 allowed? Put the correct circle ( or ) on 4. Is the number -1 allowed? Put or on -1. I -3 I -2 I -1 I 0 I 1 The exact placement of circles will vary. I 2 I 3 I 4 I 5 I 6 I 7 I 8 I 9 I 10 For problem 12, if you cover all the filled circles ( ) with a dark line and get rid of all open circles ( ) except for the boundary point, you should get a number line like the one below. We keep the filled and open circles on -1 and 4 because they are boundary points. They tell you if you should count the number on the boundary or not. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 If the number line shows where b is, write b in symbols: 13 Clue 1: I am less than or equal to 0. Clue 2: I am greater than -3. My name is k. Where am I? Use symbols: -3 < k ≤ Show everywhere I could be. I 15 I -3 I I -2 “b is between -1 and 4. It’s greater than or equal to -1 and less than 4.” -1 ≤ b < 4 I 0 -1 14 0 I 1 Clue 1: I am greater than or equal to -18. Clue 2: I am less than or equal to -9. My name is x. Where am I? Use symbols: -18 ≤ x ≤ -9 Show everywhere I could be. I I I -18 -15 I -12 I -9 Clue 1: I am greater than -20. Clue 2: I am less than or equal to 10. My name is c. Where am I? Use symbols: -20 < c ≤ Show everywhere I could be. I I I I -40 -30 -20 -10 16 I 0 10 I 10 I am somewhere in here. Write my two clues. I I I I I I 4 -6 -4 -2 0 2 I am greater or equal to -6 Clue 1: _________________________________ Clue 2: _________________________________ I am less than 2 My name is n. Where am I? Use symbols: -6 ≤ n < 2 I -6 Tough Stuff Match each clue with the correct number line. 17 Clue: I am positive. A 18 Clue: I am not positive. D 19 Clue: I am negative. B 20 Clue: I am not negative. C 22 Lesson 4: Distance and Inequalities A I 0 B I 0 C I 0 D I 0 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line T41 Additional Practice Show the numbers on the number line and find the distance between them. A 35 and 100 I I 0 C 25 and -300 E 402 and 100 I 0 G 35 100 I I -10 0 -70 -74 and 10 84 I F 302 I 100 -55 and -40 I 15 I 402 I I 0 -55 -40 H -88 to 70 Which is longer: the distance from -142 to -22 or from -142 to 22? -142 to 22 I I -88 -85 I 0 I I 68 70 I -142 m ea I Hiroshi: “I remember that these mea n ‘or equal to’ because that line underneath looks like part of an equal sign. So, x ≥ -4 means x cou ld equal -4 or any larger number, like -3 or 1 or 9...” Clue: I am greater than 120. My name is w. Where am I? Use symbols: Show everywhere I could be. I L I 100 w > 120 I I 110 120 I Clue: I am greater than or equal to 16. My name is m. Where am I? Use symbols: m ≥ 16 Show everywhere I could be. I -4 Additional Practice T42 I 90 K I 0 I 4 I 8 I 12 I 16 I 54 I 58 y < 58 I I Clue: I am less than or equal to -20. My name is a. Where am I? Use symbols: a ≤ -20 Show everywhere I could be. I M I 50 22 I? Clue: I am less than 58. My name is y. Where am I? Use symbols: Show everywhere I could be. I 46 I Wh er g nd being LOUD > soft or a river bein Ayana: “I see these and think of sou s BIG > small. So, 5 > 3.” WIDE > narrow. The symbol itself goe ≥ and ≤ I -22 0 > and < J I I 0 10 -74 Which is longer: the distance from -85 to 68 or from -88 to 70? I 60 I I I 0 25 -300 -10 and -70 I D 325 I B 65 I I -20 -15 I -10 I -5 Clue: I am greater than -21. My name is u. Where am I? Use symbols: Show everywhere I could be. I I -21 I -14 I -7 I 0 u > -21 I 0 I 23 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Lesson 5: Geography of Addition and Subtraction Purpose Students use what they have learned about position and order on the number line to solve Where Am I? puzzles with distance. Then, students use that visual image to make sense of addition and subtraction and see that there is a logic to the structure of addition and subtraction on the number line. The way that addition and subtraction affects position on the number line is not arbitrary, but follows a predictable pattern, which students will learn to use in their calculations. Lesson at a Glance Preparation: The launch suggests the use of individual whiteboards, though the same work can be done on paper. Mental Mathematics: (5 min) See pages XX-XX of the TTA Mental Mathematics book. As a Class Launch: (10 min) Finding Distances Student Problem Solving and Thinking Out Loud Dialogue: (30 min) • Students work through the first page on finding distances. • When students have generally started to reach problem 12, bring the class together to work through the Thinking Out Loud dialogue. • Use the language in the Thinking Out Loud dialogue to go through problems 13-16 and discuss. In Groups As a Class Unit 2 Related Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo (See Teacher Guide page T59 and Student Book page 35) Launch – Finding Distances: Ask students to draw a number line that helps them find the distance between 78 and 303. Each student should sketch their own number line on an individual whiteboard (or piece of paper). Acknowledge that subtraction is also a way to find the distance, but in this case, subtraction is a bit onerous to do on paper and quite difficult to do mentally. This may help convince students that it is useful to explore an alternate strategy for finding distance. Students will likely draw one of two diagrams, both of which can be useful. A student may justify drawing a number line that spans only from 78 to 303 as its endpoints because we only need to consider the space between the two numbers. Another student might mark “0” on their number line and mark 78 and 303 relative to 0. This visual model makes sense especially for a student who strongly identifies distance with finding the difference between two numbers, since it shows that 303 is at a greater distance from 0 than 78 is from 0. Lesson 5: Geography of Addition and Subtraction Teacher Tips In Unit 2, we have seen number lines where regular markings were used to establish a scale (see Lesson 1) and other number lines where the scale was distorted either to emphasize the order of numbers or as a practical matter to provide space to mark relative distances between numbers even if the drawing was not to scale. Part of learning how to think mathematically about interpreting diagrams and using the number line strategically is learning to switch between different representations and to distinguish important from unimportant features of a diagram. Similarly, when students produce their own diagrams, they have a chance to practice figuring out how to make a diagram that helps them. T43 In either case, once the student has a visual representation for the distance between 78 and 303, ask, “What is a distance you know is too large to be the answer?” (Possible responses: 1000, 303, 300, 250). Ask, “What is a distance you know is too small to be the answer?” (Possible responses: 1, 10, 100, 200) Depending on how the conversation goes, this may be a good way to start to talk about drawing “jumps” to identify large chunks of distances between 78 and 303. If a student says that 200 is a distance that is too small, ask “How do 200 you know?” They might say that 200 is the distance between 100 and 300, and we can see the distance between 78 and 303 is greater. Show students how to 78 100 300 303 indicate this observation on a number line. Then give students time to generate the rest of their picture. Share interesting student responses with the class. Point out similarities between different methods: students will likely have identified 80 or 300 as useful reference points. Here are two possible responses you may see. 2 20 78 80 100 200 3 300 303 25 75 78 200 100 300 303 Both of these responses use ideas from earlier in the unit. In Lesson 1, students located numbers relative to the nearest multiple of 10, in Lesson 2, they noticed that the distance between 78 and 303 is the same as the distance from 75 to 300, and their Mental Mathematics activities have supported finding distances to 10 and 100. Student Problem Solving and Thinking Out Loud Dialogue: Students should work in pairs or small groups on problems 1-11. When students have generally started to reach problem 12, gather the class and ask three volunteers to read the Thinking Out Loud dialogue at the board. It is important that they recreate the picture on the board as they act. To give more students the opportunity to act and to further reinforce the vocabulary of “adding the opposite,” ask a second group of students to perform the dialogue again. As students consider the question in the Pausing to Think box, refer back to what students did with checkers in Lesson 3. Subtracting -5 is like removing 5 red checkers from a pile of checkers where the score is m. Students will use the ideas from the dialogue to fill in the number lines in problems 13-16, making sense of how the generic diagram relating addition and subtraction from a variable (problems 13 and 14) relates to the a diagram showing addition and subtraction from a number (problems 15 and 16). What if... What if students don’t know how to add and subtract positive and negative numbers? This difficulty is not uncommon. Emphasize to students that the point is not to “know how,” but to be able to make sense of the calculation. Refrain from reducing this process into a set of rules. It is tempting to say something like “In subtraction, when the signs are the same, you subtract, and when the signs are different, you add.” For most students, they already have a set of rules in their heads which are confusing (“In 2–5, the signs are different, so I add?”). Keep pointing students back to the number line image so that they use that tool to make sense of the numbers instead of just applying rules without thinking about what’s going on. What if students don’t want to draw “jumps” on the number line and instead find distances by subtracting using the standard algorithm? Students may feel frustrated if they feel like they are being made to learn a new procedure for a problem they already feel like they know how to do. The message is never “Don’t use what you know.” The subtraction algorithm is very useful to know. But when learning algebra, these strategies become much less useful. There’s no way to apply the subtraction algorithm to x – 45. The number line is a tool that is useful beyond arithmetic calculations to algebraic reasoning. T44 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Supporting Classroom Discussion Use these additional questions to discuss ideas from this lesson. • If someone asks you to find -14 – 3, several possible answers might come to mind. Describe a number line image that will help you be confident you have the correct answer. Ask several students the same question with different examples. • Describe your results in problems 15 and 16 using the black and red checkers from Lesson 3. What is the connection between the number line and the checkers? Recall that putting in checkers is like adding and removing checkers is like subtracting. For example, it makes sense that 3 – -12 is to the right of 3 on the number line because subtracting -12 is like removing 12 red checkers, which increases black’s score. Connections to Algebra Algebraic thinking often requires students to think “inside out” and “backwards.” In problems 1-4, students find distances between two numbers using strategies demonstrated in the launch. Then, in problems 5-11, students must switch their thinking. They are now given a distance, and they need to figure out a way to use the distance as a measurement along the number line. Finally, problems 12-16 use a similar image of distance as a general image of addition and subtraction of positive and negative numbers. In order to develop algebraic thinking, it’s important that students understand that all the problems are connected, and they should be encouraged to make sense of new problems based on their understanding of previous problems. Notes: Lesson 5: Geography of Addition and Subtraction T45 2-5 Geography of Addition and Subtraction Important Stuff Show the numbers on the number line and find the distance between them. 1 71 and 100 2 Hint: Think of 70 to 100 first. Then adjust. 3 I I 0 71 29 I I 0 -40 I 235 I I -5 0 -240 Where am I? Show all possible solutions and fill in all of the blanks. Clue: I am 14 units away from 40. Where am I? I 26 6 -7 -23 -19 24 T46 I 0 I 3 I 0 I 9 Clue: I am 5 units away from m. Where am I? Mark 0 to help you imagin e the Clue: I am 40 units away from 3. negative si Where am I? de. I 0 I 43 I -93 11 I 3 Clue: I am 83 units away from -10. Where am I? I 37 -4 0 54 -37 I I I? I I 13 I 7 I I 50 7 Clue: I am 15 units away from -4. Where am I? I 12 I 40 Clue: The distance between me and 7 is 30. Where am I? I 10 I 30 Clue: I am 10 units away from 3. Where am I? I 8 m ea Wh er 5 60 -5 and -240 I 125 I I 0 -18 4 I 78 I 100 125 and -40 165 -18 and 60 I I -10 0 73 Clue: I am 20 units away from -33. Where am I? I I 11 -53 I m I -33 I -13 I 0 See dialogue to learn how to label this number line. Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Thinking Out Loud Michael, Lena, and Jay are working on problem 12. Michael: I know how to draw the arrows (draws picture), I but then what? How do we label the answers? I I m Well, this number on the right (she points), is five more than m, so that’s m + 5 (labels m + 5). Lena: I I I m m + 5 Michael: So, can we write both answers with addition? What would we add to get to the number on the left? What about -5? Adding -5 is adding the opposite of 5, so m + -5 is on the opposite side. (Jay labels Jay: m + -5.) I I m + -5 I m m + 5 Why don’t we just use subtraction? Jay, you labeled this number (she points to m + -5), but we Lena: m – 5 could also call it m – 5 because it’s five less than m. I I m + -5 Jay: I m Sure. It’s both. Hey, do you think we can use subtraction to name the number on the right? m + 5 Michael: Let’s use the idea you had, Jay. We want to subtract the opposite of 5, right? So we subtract -5. Multiple Choice: What could Michael say next to explain what he means? Pausing to Think A That means m – -5 ends up in the same place as m + 5. B That means subtracting -5 is like adding 5. C Subtracting a negative number does the opposite of subtraction, which is addition. D All of the above. m – 5 Then label m – -5 on the number line. 13 Clue: I am 12 units away from c Where am I? c - 12 I c + -12 15 3 + 12 Plot: 3 - 12 I 3 + -12 I c 3 + -12 I 3 14 I l n+8 c - - 12 n - 8 c + 12 n + -8 I 3 – 12 3 – - 12 I 16 Plot: -10 – 3 - - 12 -10 - 8 3 + 12 -10 + -8 I Lesson 5: Geography of Addition and Subtraction Lesson 5: Geography of Addition and Subtraction I m + -5 Plot: I I m n + -8 I n -8 m – -5 -10 – 8 I -10 m + 5 n– n– 8 8 n - -8 I n + 8 -10 + -8 -10 + 8 -10 - - 8 I -10 + 8 25 T47 Stuff to Make You Think Find the temperatures for the rest of the week. Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday 12º 27 º 25 º 35 º 15 º Temperature +15º change: –2º –20º Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday 5º 20 º 18º 28 º 8º +10º Tuesday’s is higher. The temp. change from Tues. to Wed. is -2 º , so to go back to Tuesday’s temp, we add 2 º . –20º ☀ I 40º 20º I 20º 0º I ☀ 0º -20º I Today the temperature is -20º, and tomorrow’s temperature is expected to be 15º colder. Find tomorrow’s temperature. 40º -20º -40º I It got warmer by 35 º . 22 I If today’s temperature is 30º and yesterday was -5º, find the temperature change. Did it get warmer (+) or cooler (–)? Is Tuesday’s temperature higher or lower than Wednesday’s temperature? Explain why your answer makes sense. I –2º 20 A temperature of -14 º indicates a cold day. A temperature change of -14 º means it got 14 º cooler, whether the weather is actually hot or cold. I Temperature +15º change: 21 +10º Explain how “a temperature of -14º” is different from “a temperature change of -14º.” I 19 18 I 17 Tomorrow’s temperature will be -35 º . ❄ 23 -40º ❄ Today’s temperature is 30º. It is 12º warmer than it was yesterday. What was yesterday’s temperature? 24 Yesterday’s temperature was 18 º . Today’s temperature is -4º. It is 10º warmer than it was yesterday. What was yesterday’s temperature? Yesterday’s temperature was -14 º . Tough Stuff 25 Points A, B, C, and D are on the same line. The distance between A and B is 1, the distance between B and C is 2, and the distance between C and D is 4. What can be the distance between A and D? List all the possible cases. Hint: The points can be in any order. The distance between A and D can be 1, 3, 5, or 7. For example: I I I D A B I I I I I C C A B I I I I I D B A C I I I I I I D A B I (Each number line can be drawn in the backwards orientation.) 26 T48 I C I I I I D Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Additional Practice Where am I? Show all possible solutions. A Clue: I am 9 units away from 40. Where am I? I 0 C 31 I k + -7 1–7 Plot: 1 - 7 I 1 + -7 K L I I -20 1 + -7 0 I 1 -38 b - 11 k + 7 b + -11 I J Plot: l -6 + -6 - 11 1 + 7 -6 + -11 I t u Who Am I? • The sum of my digits is 5. 2 3 • My tens digit is not odd. • My tens digit and units digit differ by 1. t u Who Am I? • Both of my digits are even. 4 8 • My units digit is twice my tens digit. • My units digit is not a perfect square. Lesson 5: Geography of Addition and Subtraction -14 I 1 - -7 Additional Practice I 1 b+1 Plot: k - -7 1+7 I -2 0 I H I 30 Clue: I am 24 units away from -14. Where am I? I -7 1 – -7 I -34 F I 13 Clue: I am 32 units away from -2. Where am I? 26 I I k D I Clue: I am 7 units away from k. Where am I? k - 7 I 49 Clue: I am 13 units away from -20. Where am I? -33 G -13 I 0 6 I I 0 I I -14 Clue: I am 13 units away from 0. Where am I? I Clue: The distance between me and 6 is 20. Where am I? Mark 0 I E I 40 I B I M b–1 1 I b 11 I I 10 0 - 1 b– 1 b + -11 b - - 11 I b + 11 - 1 -6 + -11 -6 – 1 I -6 -6 – 11 -6 - - 11 I -6 + 11 52 6 = ______ =1 10 = ______ 27 T49 Lesson 6: Algebra on the Number Line Purpose In this lesson, students re-encounter a diagram of addition on the number line from Lesson 2. They use the diagram and generalize the result by considering what happens when the same structure is used on a number line that is centered on any value c. The Thinking Out Loud dialogue conveys the idea that this process of making generalizations about how numbers work is an important part of algebra. Students use variables on the number line to solve simple algebraic equations and figure out what a statement like “n + 8 is negative” tells you about n. Lesson at a Glance Mental Mathematics: (5 min) See pages XX-XX of the TTA Mental Mathematics book. As a Class Launch: (15 min) Addition Patterns and Thinking Out Loud Dialogue Student Problem Solving and Discussion: (25 min) • Give students time to work through the remaining problems. • Discuss further what it means to have variables on the number line. • Discuss ways to think about the values of variables when they are on a number line. In Groups As a Class Unit 2 Related Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo (See Teacher Guide page T59 and Student Book page 35) Launch – Addition Patterns and Thinking Out Loud Dialogue: Give students time to work on problems 1-3 in pairs or small groups. After students have worked on and discussed problem 3, go through that problem together as a class. Make sure students understand the equations in the boxes— both how to construct them and what they mean. Make sure students also understand the connection that “adding the middle number to itself,” c + c, is equivalent to “twice the middle number,” 2c. Then invite two students forward to act out the Thinking Out Loud dialogue for the class. Check for student understanding with the Pausing to Think box. Student Problem Solving and Discussion: Allow time for students to work together in small groups through the remaining problems. Problems 7-14 continue the idea from Lesson 5 of connecting the image of a number line with a variable (with a and a + 3) to a number line with numbers. Problems 15-17 ask students to think more flexibly about variables on the number line, particularly in determining whether those variables are positive or negative. Teacher Tips The ideas of problems 16-17 can be discussed in many different ways. The example in the Student Book shows a more formal approach to the problem, but you may also observe students having productive discussions by considering specific counterexamples. For example, for the statement “If a is a negative number, then a + 100 is always positive” encourage students to consider specific negative numbers (-1, -5, -20). Often, students will suggest checking numbers like -300 or -1000. You might ask questions like “How many examples would we have to try before we can declare the answer is ‘true’?” “What about ‘false’?” T50 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Supporting Classroom Discussion Use these questions to give students the opportunity to talk about number lines with variables. • We can draw a picture of adding 10 to any number. In fact, we can draw the general picture for what it looks like to add 10, subtract 10, add -10, and subtract -10 from any number. 10 x – 10 x + -10 10 x + 10 x – -10 x • Can we tell from this picture where 0 goes? No. • If 0 is located over to the right of everything in the picture, what does that tell us? Everything in the picture is negative. • If 0 is exactly halfway between x and x – 10, what does that tell us? Allow for a longer discussion. Some students will just conclude that x – 10 is negative (which is true). Some students might figure out all the values exactly, by figuring out that x = 5, so x – 10 = -5 and x + 10 = 15. Connections to Algebra Students may already have experience solving equations like x + 7 = 10. In fact, they’ve already seen similar equations in Unit 1. Problems 7-14 aren’t intended to teach “the way” for solving these equations. The emphasis is again on making sense of calculations by considering relative positions on the number line. If students see a problem like x + 7 = -10, they can (and probably should) think of “subtracting 7 from both sides.” The number line image supports this calculation, and also provides extra support by confirming that since x lies to the left of x + 7 on the number line, the result of -17 is reasonable. -17 -10 x x+7 Student Reflections and Unit Assessment: Before conducting a summative assessment of the unit, ask students to reflect on their learning by having them consider the following: • What are some things you learned in this unit? • What questions do you still have? Use this feedback to help students select additional practice problems to help them prepare for the Unit Assessment. Lesson 6: Algebra on the Number Line T51 2-6 Algebra on the Number Line Important Stuff 1 Find the sums for this number line centered on -2. -5 3 -4 -3 Fill out this number line so that it is centered on 35. 2 -4 70 -4 70 -4 70 -4 70 + -2 -1 0 + 1 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 Problems 1 and 2 used specific numbers. Now use algebra to show what happens with any number in the center. Call the center c. c - 3 + c + 3 = 2c c - 2 + c + 2 = 2c c – 1 + c + 1 = 2c c + c = 2c + c-3 c-1 c–2 c c+1 Thinking Out Loud c+2 c+3 c + 1 is the number that is 1 more than c. Michael: Why use algebra? I’d rather just use numbers. Jay: What do you mean? Michael: Why did we even do problem 3? We filled in enough of these number lines that I knew what to expect. Add the middle number to itself, and you get an answer. If you add the numbers one more and one less than the middle number, you get the same answer. Jay: Ha! You just used algebra! Michael: No, I didn’t. I was talking about the numbers and what happens with the number problems. Jay: But that’s all algebra does, too. It just abbreviates everything a little more. Algebra describes the same thing you described in words, and the variable is there to show that we can expect any number to behave the same way. Write the algebraic statements from problem 3 that go with Michael’s words. Pausing to Think 28 T52 4 “Add the middle number to itself, and you get an answer” c + c = 2c 5 “If you add the numbers one more and one less than the middle number, you get the same answer.” c - 1 + c + 1 = 2c Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Plot these values and label them on the number line below. I I m-8 m - 7 7 -1 0 I a I If a + 3 = 51, what is a? I a I I I m-3 I I c–2 1 I 2 I a+3 10 I I I m– m+2 I m I I I m+2 13 13 a = I I This number line shows both of these statements to be true. n is negative. n + 8 is negative. What are some possible values for n? Name at least five values. I I I m+8 If a + 3 = 2, what is a + 5? If b + 10 = 98, what is b? 88 -12 I a+3 98 I b 14 I b + 10 If m + 6 = -20, what is m? -26 -20 m m + 6 I I n n – 8 m+4 11 3 I I c I m – -5 a + 5 = 4 (2 more than a + 3) -1 If n – 8 = -5, what is n? -5 m- - 5 I 8 If a + 3 = -12, what is a? I a m + -5 7 Stuff to Make You Think a + 3 = 2 I -15 51 I a+3 If c – 2 = 11, what is c? 11 15 I I 48 12 I m+4 m–3 If you know that a + 3 = 2, you can use a number line to find a. I 9 m+-5 m–8 l 6 I n I I n+8 I 0 For example, n can’t be -3. Why not? 3 Responses will vary as long as n < -8, such as -10, -8.01, -200 4 , etc. Answer True or False for each statement below. If the statement is true, show how you know. If the statement is false, provide a specific example using numbers, algebra, or a picture to show why it’s not always true. 16 If a is a negative number, False then a + 100 is always positive. _______________ This picture shows that it’s possible to draw a number line that makes the statement false. I a I a + 100 I 0 17 a + 100 can be negative if a < -100 For example, if a = -300, then a + 100 is negative. Lesson 6: Algebra on the Number Line Lesson 6: Algebra on the Number Line If m is a positive number, False then m – 8 is always negative. _______________ Responses I I I will vary. 0 m – 8 m m – 8 can be positive if m > 8 For example, if m = 10, then m – 8 is positive. 29 T53 Stuff to Make You Think 18 19 On this number line, 0 and y are labeled. Label the other spaces. I I I I I -6y -5y -4y -3y -2y -y I y I I I I I 2y 3y 4y 5y 6y In both problems 18 and 19, y and -y are “opposites” of each other. And 2y and -2y are also opposites. Opposite numbers are the same distance from 0, but on opposite sides of 0. I I I 4y 3y 2y 5 17 -11 -8 63 22 -19 -105 -14.5 0 y -5 -17 11 8 -63 -22 19 105 14.5 0 -y I y I 0 I -y I I -2y -3y 5n Show where each of these belongs on the number line. I I I k 2k 22 I 0 On this number line, 0 and y are labeled, and y is a negative number. Label the other spaces. 20 21 I -2n I I 0 Plot and label these values on the number line. I I 4r 2r I r I I n 2t I 0 I t -r I -k 2k I 4r I -k 3t I 2t -2k -2n I I 5n -2k -r 2t I 3t Discuss & Write What You Think 23 At first, this number line looks wrong, because we know that negative numbers live to the left of 0 on the number line. But because x is a variable, it is possible for -x to be a positive number. Use examples to explain this number line to a person seeing it for the first time. I x 30 T54 I 0 I -x Responses will vary, but encourage students to use examples (If x=-10, we would mark x to the left of 0...) and use the idea of -x as the “opposite” of x, and not the same thing as a “negative number.” Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Use the clues to mark one possible location each for A and B. 24 Clue 1: A is positive Clue 2: B = 2A Clue 3: B > A 25 I 0 Clue 1: A is negative Clue 2: B = 2A Clue 3: B < A I I I I A B B A I 0 Discuss & Write What You Think 26 Problems 24 and 25 show that the answer to “Which is greater, x or 2x?” is “It depends.” What does it depend on? It depends on whether x is positive or negative. When x is positive, 2x is greater than x. When x is negative, 2x is less than x. 27 Is it possible for “a number” and “twice the same number” to be the same? In other words, can n = 2n? If so, when? If not, why is this impossible? Yes, it is possible, in only one place. When n = 0, 2n = 0. 28 Is it possible for “a number” and “two more than the same number” to be the same? In other words, can y = y + 2? If so, when? If not, why is this impossible? No, this is impossible. “Two more than y” will always be to the right of y on the number line, no matter what y is. They can never be the same number. Tough Stuff When you are taking a long test, you want to use methods that save you time. That always means understanding what the test problem is asking for. It also means understanding what the problem is not asking for, to avoid unnecessary work. For each problem, find each answer, but do no more work than is really needed. 29 If a + 20 = 12, then a + 21 = 30 If 6 – b = 0, then 10 – b = 31 If 150 – c = 17120, then 160 – c = A 32 A 16 A 17270 B 13 B 10 B 17030 C 12 C 6 C 17130 D 11 D 4 D 17110 E 8 E 0 E 310 Lesson 6: Algebra on the Number Line Lesson 6: Algebra on the Number Line 31 T55 Additional Practice On this number line, a is labeled. Plot: a– a + 6 a + -6 6 a– 6 a - 6 a + -6 C I I I I a + 6 I -7+s h+ - 8 I Show where each of these belongs on the number line. I On this number line, and h + 12 are labeled. Plot: h + 4 h + -4 h + -8 h – -8 a - -6 I a I B I s+9 I I s + -1 s–4 l A I I s s+–1 s–4 I I I h h+ - 4 I I I I I h+4 -7 + s 6+s h- - 8 s – -8 s– 2 I I s–-2 I h + 12 I I I s – - 8 s+9 6+s Use the number line to find the value of the variable. G If n + 2 = 9, what is n? 7 I J I n I 10 If y – 3 = 49, what is y? 49 I y–3 K I I If h + 2 = -13, what is h? 52 -15 I y I h L I I h+2 -23 -3 m m + 20 I I c c - 10 -13 If m + 20 = -3, what is m? -8 I I w I If c – 10 = -18, what is c? -18 41 I w – 10 N 9 I n+2 If w – 10 = 31, what is w? 31 M H I 2 1 -10 -11 44 83 -26 -9 -5 -6 p 8 7 -4 -5 50 89 -20 -3 1 0 p+6 8 9 -7 -6 56 40 -17 -30 2 3 x 5 6 -10 -9 53 37 -20 -33 -1 0 x–3 Draw a number line which shows both of these statements to be true. n is negative. n + 8 is positive. What are some possible values for n? Name at least five values. I n I 0 I n + 8 1 Responses will vary as long as -8 < n < 0, such as -1, -7.9, -2 3 , etc. 32 T56 Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Unit 2 Additional Practice Use these pages to prepare for the unit exam. Finish labeling the marks on these lines in a consistent way. I -2 I 0 I I -9 -6 I -3 I I I I I -33 -30 -27 -24 -21 1 3 5 I I 4 2 I 2 6 I I 3 0 4 I -18 I -30 I -25 I I I -20 -15 -10 I -300 I I I -200 -100 I 0 I I I I I -15 -12 -9 -6 -3 I 0 100 I I 3 6 I 9 Use the clues to mark one possible location each for A, B, and C so they are in the correct order. 6 Clue 1: A < B Clue 2: B is negative. Clue 3: C > 0 I I A B 7 Clue 1: B < A < C Clue 2: B > 0 Clue 3: C > B I I 0 Clue 1: A > C Clue 2: C < A Clue 3: A < B 8 I I I I 0 BA C C I I I C A B Find the weight of the variable so that the mobile balances. 9 12 13 10 11 61 h 34 30 103 250 89 90 w 200 248 p 61 + 89 = h + 90 34 + w = 30 + 200 103 + 248 = 250 + p 60 h = _______ 196 w = _______ 101 p = _______ t u Who Am I? • My tens digit is even. 8 3 • The sum of my digits is 11. • My units digit is less than my tens digit. • My tens digit is five more than u. t u Who Am I? • I am odd. 1 1 • I am less than 40. • Both of my digits are perfect squares. • t–u=0 Additional Practice Unit Additional Practice 14 20 3 = ______ 2 = ______ 3 = ______ 33 T57 Show the numbers on the number line and find the distance between them. 15 60 and -35 I 18 I I -2 0 20 and -90 100 Wh er 19 Clue: I am less than or equal to 36. My name is w. Where am I? Use symbols: w ≤ 36 Show everywhere I could be. I 24 18 30 I 36 Mark 0 I 9 0 I -61 I I I b-8 I I I I I I -8 -3+b I I b-2 I I b I 2 4 6 I I 8 I 16 Clue: I am 13 units away from -14. Where am I? I -27 b–2 I 0 I b+5 n > 6 Clue: I am less than or equal to -8. My name is a. Where am I? Use symbols: a ≤ -8 Show everywhere I could be. 79 I I 0 -2 I Plot the numbers. Be sure to label them. Some of them end up in the same place. b+ - 8 I I 23 20 Clue: I am greater than 6. My name is n. Where am I? Use symbols: Show everywhere I could be. I Clue: I am 70 units away from 9. Where am I? I 24 I l 22 I 21 I I 0 -90 I? I 12 I 0 110 I I -4 20 I -43 -23 102 I 20 I 60 -2 and 100 m ea -23 and -43 I I 0 -35 17 16 95 3+b I b–8 I b+3 I 3+b I -14 b+3 I -1 b+ I b+5 -8 I I 0 b–10 -3 + b I I I I b- - 10 Use the number line to find the value of the variable. 25 If x + 5 = 3, what is x? -2 I x 34 T58 3 I x+5 26 If a – 10 = -25, what is a? -25 I a - 10 -15 I a 27 If h + 8 = -10, what is h? -18 -10 h h + 8 I I Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo Purpose Students are introduced to Who Am I? puzzles in Lesson 3. This bingo game is a fun way to introduce the language of the many clues students may encounter in the Who Am I? puzzles. Timing: This activity is intended to be done in short 5-10 min sessions throughout Unit 2. Preparation: Print and cut out a set of Clue Cards (on pages T60- T70), preferably on cardstock or laminated. Students will need extra paper to write their numbers. Game Suggestions: • Game instructions are on page 35 of the Student Book. • When playing for the first time with the whole class, read each clue, pause briefly, read it again, and pause once more for students to check their numbers. Once students have experienced the game, increase the pace of the game. Even if not all players get the clue, move on to the next one. That’s part of the game! • Make sure you keep track of the cards you’ve used in a round, so that the class can check to see whether the player is correct. In order to speed up the checking process, you may also ask students to write down “Clue 120” next to the number when they’ve crossed it off their list. This has the potential to confuse, however, since students will be evaluating their set of numbers against the clue, and will also have to keep track of the clue number. This option may be better used when students are playing in pairs or small groups and can see each card, rather than when playing with the whole class. Variations: • Play with the whole class, with the teacher or a volunteer drawing and reading the clues. • Give students their own stack of cards, or split up the deck, and have students play in small groups of 4-5 students. • Reverse the game: Hand out five cards to each student. Call out a series of three-digit numbers. If the card describes the number, the player puts it down. The first player to put all of their cards down calls “Bingo!” • Split up the deck, giving each pair of students three cards, drawn randomly. Their challenge is to make up as many numbers as possible for which all three clues are true. If they can show that two or more clues are mutually exclusive (so that no numbers are possible), they can trade in their cards for a new set. Game Extension: Students may make up their own clue cards. They may write clues to add to the existing set about square numbers, prime numbers, factors, or make up clues which use more symbols, such as “h + t = 2u.” Or, students might make up an entirely new set of cards to use with: • Four digit numbers: Clues include references to the thousand’s digit, or “k.” • Fractions: Clues refer to the numerator and denomintaor. • Decimals: Clues refer to the tenths digit, or “d.” Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo T59 Who-Am-I? Number Bingo Clue Cards T60 1 The tens digit is 3 times the units digit. 2 The tens digit is twice the units digit. 3 The units digit is twice the hundreds digit. 4 The units digit is 3 times the tens digit. 5 The hundreds digit is 3 less than the units digit. 6 The hundreds digit is 3 less than one of the other digits. 7 The number is one less than a multiple of 10. 8 One of the digits is 3 less than anther digit. 9 The units digit is twice the tens digit. 10 The tens digit is 2 greater than one of the other digits. 11 The hundreds digit is 2 greater than the ones digit. 12 The units digit is less than twice the hundreds digit. 13 The tens digit is 2 greater than one of the other digits. 14 The hundreds digit is 2 greater than one of the other digits. Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Who-Am-I? Number Bingo Clue Cards 15 The tens digit is 2 greater than the hundreds digit. 16 The hundreds digit is 3 less than the units digit. 17 The hundreds digit is greater than the units digit. 18 The tens digit is 3 times the units digit. 19 The number is two more than a multiple of 5. 20 The tens digit is twice the hundreds digit. 21 The number is four less than a multiple of 10. 22 The units digit is twice the tens digit. 23 The hundreds digit is 3 less than the tens digit. 24 The hundreds digit is greater than twice the units digit. 25 The units digit is less than twice the hundreds digit. 26 The tens digit is 3 times the units digit. 27 The tens digit is more than twice the hundreds digit. 28 The hundreds digit is 3 less than one of the other digits. Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo T61 Who-Am-I? Number Bingo Clue Cards T62 29 The hundreds digit is 3 less than one of the other digits. 30 The hundreds digit is twice the units digit. 31 The tens digit is twice the units digit. 32 Tens digit < units digit. 33 The hundreds digit is 2 greater than one of the other digits. 34 The units digit is 3 times the tens digit. 35 Sum of all the digits is 9, 12, 15, or 18. 36 The units digit is greater than the hundreds digit. 37 The hundreds digit is twice the units digit. 38 The hundreds digit is twice the tens digit. 39 The tens digit is twice the hundreds digit. 40 One of the digits is 3 less than another digit. 41 One of the digits is 3 more than another digit. 42 The tens digit is greater than the hundreds digit. Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Who-Am-I? Number Bingo Clue Cards 43 The units digit is 3 times the tens digit. 45 44 Units digit < tens digit. The hundreds digit is twice the tens digit. 46 The units digit is twice the tens digit. 47 The hundreds digit is greater than twice the units digit. 48 The units digit is less than twice the hundreds digit. 49 The sum of all the digits is a multiple of 3. 50 The tens digit is twice the units digit. 51 The hundreds digit is 3 times the tens digit. 52 The hundreds digit is 3 less than the units digit. 53 The tens digit times the units digit is 0. 54 The hundreds digit is greater than the tens digit.. 55 The hundreds digit times the units digit is a multiple of 3. 56 The tens digit is twice the hundreds digit. Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo T63 Who-Am-I? Number Bingo Clue Cards T64 57 The sum of all the digits is a multiple of 5. 58 The tens digit is 2 greater than the hundreds digit. 59 The tens digit times the units digit is a multiple of 3. 60 The hundreds digit is 3 less than the tens digit. 61 The tens digit plus the hundreds digit is a multiple of 3. 62 The hundreds digit is 2 greater than one of the other digits. 63 The hundreds digit is 3 times the units digit. 64 The units digit is twice the hundreds digit. 65 The units digit times the tens digit is a multiple of 10. 66 The hundreds digit is 2 greater than the units digit. 67 The hundreds digit times the tens digit is a multiple of 3. 68 The tens digit is more than twice the hundreds digit. 69 The tens digit times the units digit is a multiple of 10. 70 The hundreds digit is greater than twice the units digit. Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Who-Am-I? Number Bingo Clue Cards 71 The tens digit times the units digit is less than 8. 72 The units digit plus the hundreds digit < 8. 73 The units digit plus the hundreds digit is less than 8. 74 The sum of all the digits is a multiple of 3. 75 Sum of the tens digit and the units digit is less than 8. 76 The hundreds digit times the units digit is a multiple of 3. 77 The product of all the digits is a multiple of 3. 78 The tens digit plus the hundreds digit is a multiple of 3. 79 Sum of the tens digit and the units digit is a multiple of 3. 80 The product of all the digits is less than 8. 81 Sum of the units digit and the hundreds digit is a multiple of 3. 82 The units digit times the tens digit is a multiple of 10. 83 The product of all the digits is less than 8. 84 The hundreds digit times the tens digit is a multiple of 3. Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo T65 Who-Am-I? Number Bingo Clue Cards T66 85 All three digits are the same. 86 The tens digit times the units digit is a multiple of 10. 87 The number is four less than a multiple of 10. 88 The tens digit times the units digit is 0. 89 Units digit < 5. 90 The sum of all the digits is a multiple of 5. 91 Hundreds digit > 6. 92 The tens digit times the units digit is a multiple of 3. 93 At least two digits are the same. 94 Sum of the tens digit and the units digit is a multiple of 3. 95 Two of the digits are less than 5. 96 The hundreds digit is 3 times the units digit. 97 The number is a multiple of 10. 98 The tens digit times the units digit is less than 8. Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Who-Am-I? Number Bingo Clue Cards 99 Units digit > 6. 101 None 103 The 5. of the digits are odd. number is a multiple of 105 Sum of all the digits is less than 12. of the digits are greater than 5. 100 Sum of the tens digit and the units digit is less than 8. 102 The hundreds digit is 3 times the tens digit. 104 The product of all the digits is a multiple of 3. 106 Sum of all the units digit and the hundreds digit is a multiple of 3. 107 Two 108 The 109 The 110 The 111 The 112 The hundreds digit is greater than the units digit. number is two more than a multiple of 5. Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo tens digit is more than twice the hundreds digit. tens digit is twice the hundreds digit. hundreds digit is greater than the tens digit. T67 Who-Am-I? Number Bingo Clue Cards 113 None 115 The of the digits are even. tens digit is 4. 117 Tens digit < 3. 119 Hundreds 121 The tens digit is 9. 123 The hundreds digit is 9. 125 Tens T68 digit > 2. digit is 7, 8, or 9. 114 The tens digit is 2 greater than the hundreds digit. 116 The units digit is twice the hundreds digit. 118 The hundreds digit is 2 greater than one of the other digits. 120 The units digit is less than twice the hundreds digit. 122 The units digit is greater than the hundreds digit. 124 The hundreds digit is twice the tens digit. 126 The hundreds digit is 2 greater than the units digit. Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Who-Am-I? Number Bingo Clue Cards 127 The number is four less than a multiple of 10. 129 The number is two more than a multiple of 5. number is one less than a multiple of 10. 128 The hundreds digit is 3 less than the tens digit. 130 Tens 131 The 132 One 133 Sum 134 The 135 The 136 The 137 The 138 The 139 The 140 The of all the digits is 9, 12, 15, or 18. tens digit is more than twice the hundreds digit. units digit is twice the hundreds digit. tens digit is 2 greater than the hundreds digit. Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo digit < units digit. of the digits is 3 less than another digit. hundreds digit is twice the units digit. tens digit is 3 times the units digit. hundreds digit is greater than twice the ones digit. tens digit is twice the units digit. T69 Who-Am-I? Number Bingo Clue Cards 141 The hundreds digit is 3 less than the tens digit. 143 The hundreds digit is greater than the tens digit. hundreds digit is twice the tens digit. tens digit is 2 greater than one of the other digits. 144 Units 145 The 146 The 147 The 148 The 149 The 150 The hundreds digit is twice the units digit. hundreds digit is 2 greater than the units digit. T70 142 The digit < tens digit. hundreds digit is 3 less than the units digit. units digit is twice the tens digit. hundreds digit is 3 less than one of the other digits. Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo Instructions: 472 689 255 205 100 • Every player writes down their own set of five 3-digit numbers. • Shuffle the clue cards and stack them face down. • Turn one clue over at a time and read it aloud. 99 Units d s are odd. e of the digit 101 Non igit > 6 . 120 The units digit is less than twice the hundreds digit. • Each player checks all five of their numbers to see if the clue fits. If the clue fits, the player can cross that number out. 472 689 255 205 100 Clue120 Clue99 Clue120 • Any player who has crossed out all five numbers says “Bingo!” • Check the numbers against the clues. If the person was correct, they win. If there are errors, continue to play until there is a winner. Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo Game: Who Am I? Number Bingo 35 T71 Snapshot Check-in Name: Finish labeling the marks on these lines in a consistent way. 1 I 3 I -30 I I I I I 2 I I 4 I I 2 I I I I I I -20 I I 0 4 Find three numbers that continue this pattern: 12, 6, 0, _____ , _____ , _____ 5 Is this mobile balanced or is one side heavier than the other? Explain your reasoning for without doing the addition on either side. 68 ? I I I 0 I I 9 I 70 21 20 Find the weight of the variable so that the mobile balances. 6 T72 7 39 h 52 50 89 90 w 100 39 + 89 = h + 90 52 + w = 50 + 100 h = _______ w = _______ Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Snapshot Check-in Name: Answer Key Finish labeling the marks on these lines in a consistent way. 1 3 4 5 I I I I 2 I 4 I I -4 -2 0 -40 -30 I -30 I I I I I I I I I -27 -24 -21 -18 -15 -12 -9 -6 -3 2 I -20 I 0 I I 0 -10 I I 3 6 I 9 I 12 -6 , _____ -12 , _____ -18 Find three numbers that continue this pattern: 12, 6, 0, _____ Is this mobile balanced or is one side heavier than the other? The right side is heavier. Explain your reasoning for without doing the addition on either side. 68 Responses will vary. Sample responses include: ? 70 21 20 20 is 1 less than 21 but 70 is 2 more than 68 so the right side is heavier by 1. The mobile would be balanced if the left side were 69 and 21 (or 68 and 22 or another reasonable combination), but since 68 is less than 69, the left side is lighter. Find the weight of the variable so that the mobile balances. 6 7 39 h 52 50 89 90 w 100 39 + 89 = h + 90 52 + w = 50 + 100 38 h = _______ 98 w = _______ Snapshot Check-in T73 Unit Assessment Name: Finish labeling the marks on these lines in a consistent way. 1 I I 0 I I 6 I 2 I -18 I -16 I I I 3 I I I -8 I I 0 4 I I 0 I I I 60 5 I I I I I I -30 I I I I I I 0 I I I 15 Use the clues to mark one possible location each for A, B, and C so they are in the correct order. 6 Clue 1: A > B Clue 2: B > C Clue 3: C is positive. 7 Clue 1: A > B Clue 2: C < B Clue 3: C < A I 0 Find the weight of the variable so that the mobile balances. 8 10 T74 9 48 n 100 98 77 49 c 38 48 + 77 = n + 49 100 + c = 98 + 38 n = _______ c = _______ t u Who Am I? • I am odd. • My tens digit is one less than my units digit. • None of my digits is a perfect square. • I am greater than 40. 11 t u Who Am I? • My digits are both odd. • My tens digit is a perfect square. • My units digit is two more than my tens digit. Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Show the numbers on the number line and find the distance between them. 12 -10 and 110 13 -20 and -70 I 0 Clue: I am greater than or equal to 15. My name is h. Where am I? Use symbols: Show everywhere I could be. I 15 I 0 I I I I I 60 Clue: I am less than -2. My name is p. Where am I? Use symbols: Show everywhere I could be. I I Clue: I am less than or equal to 40. My name is y. Where am I? Use symbols: Show everywhere I could be. I 17 I 5 16 I I m ea I I 1 I I 3 I? Wh er 14 I 0 I 80 Clue: I am 80 units away from -2. Where am I? 18 Mark 0 Clue: I am 30 units away from -31. Where am I? I -2 19 Plot the numbers. Be sure to label them. Some of them end up in the same place. I I I I m–6 I I I l m–6 I m–2 I I m m + -5 I m – -3 m+6 I I I m– I 8 m+3 I I m+ I -1 I Use the number line to find the value of the variable. 20 If k + 10 = 2, what is k? I k Unit Assessment I k + 10 21 If a – 3 = -14, what is a? I I a T75 Unit Assessment Name: Answer Key Finish labeling the marks on these lines in a consistent way. I 1 3 5 -3 I 0 I I 6 I I -16 -12 I I I I I -55 -50 -45 -40 -35 3 I -8 I 2 9 I I 0 -4 I -18 I -16 I I 0 4 -20 I -30 I I I I I -25 -20 -15 -10 -5 I I I -14 -12 -10 I I 20 40 I 60 I 0 I I 5 10 I 15 Use the clues to mark one possible location each for A, B, and C so they are in the correct order. 6 Clue 1: A > B Clue 2: B > C Clue 3: C is positive. I I 0 C 7 Clue 1: A > B Clue 2: C < B Clue 3: C < A I I I I I B A C B A Find the weight of the variable so that the mobile balances. 8 10 T76 9 48 n 100 98 77 49 c 38 48 + 77 = n + 49 100 + c = 98 + 38 76 n = _______ 36 c = _______ t u Who Am I? • I am odd. 6 7 • My tens digit is one less than my units digit. • None of my digits is a perfect square. • I am greater than 40. 11 t u Who Am I? • My digits are both odd. 1 3 • My tens digit is a perfect square. • My units digit is two more than my tens digit. Unit 2: Geography of the Number Line Show the numbers on the number line and find the distance between them. 12 -10 and 110 13 120 I I I -10 0 15 I 0 I 5 I 10 I I 16 I 15 40 I 60 50 I I m–8 I I 70 I 1 0 p ≤ -2 I I 3 2 I? m ea 18 Mark 0 Clue: I am 30 units away from -31. Where am I? I 78 I I -1 I m+-5 m–6 I -2 Plot the numbers. Be sure to label them. Some of them end up in the same place. I Clue: I am less than -2. My name is p. Where am I? Use symbols: Show everywhere I could be. I 80 I I -2 0 -82 I 0 -20 I Clue: I am 80 units away from -2. Where am I? I 19 I I -70 Clue: I am less than or equal to 40. My name is y. Where am I? Use symbols: y ≤ 40 Show everywhere I could be. I 17 110 Clue: I am greater than or equal to 15. My name is h. Where am I? Use symbols: h ≥ 15 Show everywhere I could be. I I 50 Wh er 14 -20 and -70 I I I -61 l m–6 I m–2 m+-1 m–2 I I m m + -5 I -31 m – -3 m+6 I I m–-3 I m+3 I I -1 m– I 8 0 m+3 I m+6 I m+ I -1 I Use the number line to find the value of the variable. 20 If k + 10 = 2, what is k? -8 I k Unit Assessment 2 I k + 10 21 If a – 3 = -14, what is a? -14 I a – 3 -11 I a T77 Transition to Algebra 40 Transition to Algebra is an EDC project supported by the National Science Foundation aimed at very quickly giving students the mathematical knowledge, skill, and confidence to succeed in a standard first year algebra class. The familiar topic-oriented approach to mathematics is replaced by a small number of key mathematical ideas and ways of thinking: Algebraic Habits of Mind (puzzling, using structure, generalizing patterns, using tools, and communicating clearly). Conventional algebra topics are part of the curriculum, but instead of the topics being the focus of the lesson, they become contexts for exploring these broadly-applicable problem-solving strategies. More information on this research and development project is available at ttalgebra.edc.org.