Lesson 6
Make a Ten and Make Sense of Equations
Lesson Purpose
The purpose of this lesson is for students to add one-digit and two-digit numbers, with composing a ten, using place value understanding and the properties of operations. Students also make sense of equations that represent addition methods.
Lesson Narrative
In this lesson, students add one-digit and two-digit numbers by composing a ten using place value reasoning and properties of operations. The associative and commutative property are highlighted in this lesson.
The first activity uses 10-frame diagrams to encourage students to determine how many ones can be added to a two-digit number to get to the next multiple of 10. Much like they did when looking to make a ten when adding within 20, students consider decomposing a one-digit number in such a way that they can combine one part with the two-digit number to make a multiple of 10 (\(68 + 6 = 68 + 2 + 4 = 74\)).
In the second activity, students compare different representations of this method, including those that use connecting cubes and base-ten drawings. These representations help students use their understanding of place value to see that when adding ones to ones, they can sometimes make a new unit of ten. This is a conceptual jump for students from understanding that they can count to a “10” (or the next ten) to understanding that they can create a new unit of ten from 10 ones (MP7).
- Engagement
- MLR7
Activity 2: Elena and Andre Add
Learning Goals
Teacher Facing
- Add a one-digit and a two-digit number, with composing a ten, using place value understanding and the properties of operations.
- Make sense of equations that represent addition methods.
Student Facing
- Let’s add one-digit and two-digit numbers and make sense of equations.
Required Materials
Materials to Gather
Materials to Copy
- Target Numbers Stage 1 Recording Sheet
Required Preparation
Lesson Timeline
Warm-up | 10 min |
Activity 1 | 10 min |
Activity 2 | 15 min |
Activity 3 | 15 min |
Lesson Synthesis | 10 min |
Cool-down | 0 min |
Teacher Reflection Questions
How did the work of Activity 1 lay the foundation for students to be successful in the next activity? What do students need to be fluent with in order to use the method presented in Activity 2?