Lesson 10
Compare Drawings
Lesson Purpose
The purpose of this lesson is for students to compare drawings that represent story problems.
Lesson Narrative
In a previous lesson, students solved Add To and Take From, Result Unknown story problems and explained how both objects and drawings represented the story. In this lesson, students solve story problems and compare how different drawings represent the story. Students interpret both drawings that correctly and incorrectly represent the story problem, as well as unorganized and organized drawings. While students are not expected to produce a drawing to represent and solve a story problem in this lesson, students make sense of various drawings, which will help them be prepared to create drawings in a future lesson. The purpose of the lesson synthesis is for students to discuss how it can be easier to see what happens in the story problem in an organized drawing.
- Representation
- MLR8
Learning Goals
Teacher Facing
- Compare drawings that represent story problems.
- Solve Add To, Result Unknown and Take From, Result Unknown story problems.
Student Facing
- Let’s figure out how drawings can show what is happening in a story problem.
Required Materials
Materials to Gather
- Connecting cubes
- Connecting cubes or two-color counters
- Materials from previous centers
- Two-color counters
Materials to Copy
- Questions About Us Chart 5-Frame Template
- Dot Mat 1-5 (dots and 5-frames)
- Bingo Stages 1-3 Gameboard
Required Preparation
Warm-up:
- Cut out enough 5-frames to make a chart with a space for each student to answer the survey question.
Activity 3:
- Each group of 4 students needs 2 connecting cubes.
- Gather materials from:
- Math Fingers, Stages 1-3
- Math Stories, Stages 1 and 2
- Subtraction Towers, Stage 1
- 5-frames, Stages 1 and 2
- Counting Collections, Stage 1
Lesson Timeline
Warm-up | 10 min |
Activity 1 | 10 min |
Activity 2 | 10 min |
Activity 3 | 25 min |
Lesson Synthesis | 5 min |
Cool-down | 0 min |
Teacher Reflection Questions
In the next lesson, all students will be asked to produce a drawing to represent and solve a story problem. How does the work in this lesson and previous lessons lay the foundation for students to create their own drawings?