Lesson 15
Number Talk
Warm-up: Number Talk: Addition (10 minutes)
Narrative
The purpose of this Number Talk is to elicit strategies and understandings students have for adding within 1,000. These understandings help students develop fluency and will be helpful when students create their own Number Talk activities.
In the synthesis, discuss what students know about Number Talks and what they need to think about to create one like this example.
Launch
- Display one expression.
- “Give me a signal when you have an answer and can explain how you got it.”
- 1 minute: quiet think time
Activity
- Record answers and strategy.
- Keep expressions and work displayed.
- Repeat with each expression.
Student Facing
Find the value of each expression mentally.
- \(300 + 400\)
- \(300 + 437\)
- \(321 + 437\)
- \(425 + 514\)
Student Response
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Activity Synthesis
- “What do you know about Number Talks?” (They always have four expressions and we find their values in our head. Sometimes we can use the same method for each expression. Sometimes we can use the first couple of expressions to help us find the value of other expressions.)
- Consider asking: “What would you have to think about if you were going to design a Number Talk like this one?” (How one expression might relate to the next. What strategies might make it possible for someone to find the value mentally. Whether it's possible to use one expression to find the value of other expressions.)
- Record and display responses for all to see.
Activity 1: Number Talk Design 1 (15 minutes)
Narrative
The purpose of this activity is for students to reason about subtraction and write another subtraction expression to complete a partially-completed Number Talk activity. If there is time, students can facilitate their Number Talk with another group. Students are given three expressions and prompted to think of ways that they could be evaluated mentally. They then write a fourth expression in which similar reasoning could be used, or by making use of the first three expressions.
Advances: Reading, Representing
Launch
- Groups of 2 - 4
- “Here are three expressions like the kinds you might see in a Number Talk.”
Activity
- “How would you find the value of each expression, without writing? For each expression, think of at least two ways. Then, share your thinking with your group.”
- Reiterate to students that they are to consider how someone might reason about each difference, rather than only finding the value.
- 4 minutes: independent work time
- 4 minutes: small-group discussion
- “Write one more expression that could go with the other three expressions and would complete a Number Talk activity.”
- 4 minutes: small-group work time
- Monitor for groups who consider the following strategies in writing their expression:
- adjust the 399 to a different number, but keep the 500
- leave the 399, but adjust the 500
- adjust both the 500 and the 399, but create a problem that can be reasoned as in previous expressions
- Identify groups who chose different strategies to share in the synthesis.
Student Facing
Here are three subtraction expressions.
- \(600 - 400\)
- \(600 - 399\)
- \(500 - 399\)
- \(\underline{\hspace{2.5in}}\)
- Think of at least two different ways to find the value of each difference mentally.
- Write a fourth subtraction expression whose value can be found using one of the strategies you thought of.
Student Response
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Activity Synthesis
- Select groups to share their last expression and their reasoning.
- As each group shares, ask others in the class if they had used the same strategy to write their expression and if they arrived at a similar expression.
Activity 2: Number Talk Design 2 (15 minutes)
Narrative
The purpose of this activity is for students to reason about addition and apply their reasoning to complete a partially-completed Number Talk activity. This time, students are given addition expressions and are asked to think about how the value of the sums could be found mentally. They then write two new addition expressions to complete the set.
Supports accessibility for: Memory, Organization
Launch
- Groups of 2 - 4
- “Here are two expressions like the kinds you might see in a Number Talk.”
Activity
- “How would you find the value of each expression, without writing? For each expression, think of at least two ways. Then, share your thinking with your group.”
- Reiterate to students that they are to consider how someone might reason about each sum, rather than only finding the value.
- 3 minutes: independent work time
- 3 minutes: small-group discussion
- “Write two more expressions that could go with the other two expressions and would complete a Number Talk activity.”
- 5 minutes: small-group work time
- Monitor for groups who consider the following strategies in writing their expression:
- adjust the 504 to a different number, but keep the 199
- leave the 504, but adjust the 199
- adjust the 504 and the 199, but create a problem that can be reasoned as in previous expressions
- Identify groups who chose different strategies to share in the synthesis.
Student Facing
Here are two addition expressions.
- \(500 + 199\)
- \(504 + 199\)
- \(\underline{\hspace{2.5in}}\)
- \(\underline{\hspace{2.5in}}\)
- Think of at least two different ways to find the value of each sum mentally.
- Write two more addition expressions whose value can be found using the strategies you thought of.
Student Response
Teachers with a valid work email address can click here to register or sign in for free access to Student Response.
Activity Synthesis
- Select groups to share their two expressions and their reasoning.
- As each group shares, ask others in the class if they had used the same strategy to write their expressions and if they arrived at similar expressions.
Activity 3: Number Talk Design 3 (15 minutes)
Narrative
Launch
- Groups of 2 - 4
- “Work with your group to complete a Number Talk with three expressions missing. Write them in the blank lines.”
Activity
- 10 minutes: small-group work time
- Monitor for groups who:
- adjust the 900 or 400 to emphasize a certain subtraction strategy
- make slight adjustments in each expression but promote the same reasoning strategy throughout
- Identify groups who choose different strategies to share in the synthesis.
Student Facing
Write three subtraction expressions to complete the Number Talk.
- \(900 - 400\)
- \(\underline{\hspace{2.5in}}\)
- \(\underline{\hspace{2.5in}}\)
- \(\underline{\hspace{2.5in}}\)
Student Response
Teachers with a valid work email address can click here to register or sign in for free access to Student Response.
Activity Synthesis
- Select groups to share their completed Number Talk and ask the class how the groups might have chosen the expressions.
Activity 4: Number Talk Design 4 (15 minutes)
Narrative
The purpose of this activity is for students to design a Number Talk from a blank slate. They can choose to write addition or subtraction expressions, but still consider possible ways that others might find the value of the expressions mentally. If there is time, allow students to facilitate their Number Talk with another group.
Launch
- Groups of 1 - 4
- “Work independently or with your group to create a Number Talk activity. You can decide whether to write addition or subtraction expressions.”
Activity
- 10 minutes: independent or small-group work time
- Monitor for groups who design their expressions based on certain strategies for subtracting numbers mentally, such as:
- adding hundreds to hundreds, tens to tens, and ones to ones
- adding up to subtract
- relating to benchmarks such as multiples of 100 or 10
Student Facing
Write four addition or subtraction expressions to create a Number Talk.
- \(\underline{\hspace{2.5in}}\)
- \(\underline{\hspace{2.5in}}\)
- \(\underline{\hspace{2.5in}}\)
- \(\underline{\hspace{2.5in}}\)
Student Response
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Activity Synthesis
- Invite 1–2 groups to share their completed Number Talk or to facilitate it for the class.
- Alternatively, if time permits, allow groups to take turns facilitating their Number Talk with another group.
Lesson Synthesis
Lesson Synthesis
“What were some important things you considered as you created expressions for your Number Talk? Why were these things important?” (I thought about what method I wanted other students to think about, because this helped me think about which expressions to write. I thought about how one problem was related to the next, to make sure the Number Talk made sense.)
Cool-down: Number Talk Reflection (5 minutes)
Cool-Down
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