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Minilessons for Early Addition and Subtraction: A Yearlong Resource [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 96 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 277x218x7 mm, kaal: 245 g, Illustrations
  • Sari: Context for Learning Math
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Mar-2008
  • Kirjastus: Heinemann Educational Books,U.S.
  • ISBN-10: 0325010137
  • ISBN-13: 9780325010137
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 96 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 277x218x7 mm, kaal: 245 g, Illustrations
  • Sari: Context for Learning Math
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Mar-2008
  • Kirjastus: Heinemann Educational Books,U.S.
  • ISBN-10: 0325010137
  • ISBN-13: 9780325010137
Minilessons for Early Addition and Subtraction is one of three yearlong resource guides in Contexts for Learning Mathematics' Investigating Number Sense, Addition, and Subtraction (K - 3)
Minilessons for Early Addition and Subtraction is a resource of 78 minilessons that you can choose from throughout the year. In contrast to investigations, which constitute the heart of the math workshop, the minilesson is more guided and more explicit, designed to be used at the start of math workshop and to last ten to fifteen minutes. Each day, no matter what other materials you are using, you might choose a minilesson from this resource to provide your students with experiences to develop efficient computation. You can also use the minilessons with small groups of students as you differentiate instruction.
The minilessons in this guide were designed to be used in grades 1 - 2. Some of the minilessons make use of quick images with pictures. We call these “billboards.” They are carefully designed pictures that support the development of important strategies for addition and subtraction by building in potentially realizable strategies or constraints. Flashed for only a few seconds, they encourage children to give up trying to count each item and instead to use their natural ability to subitize - to perceive small amounts (such as 2, 3, or 4) as units and use them. In this way, children are supported to count on, skip-count, use doubles, and make use of the five-structure. Other minilessons in this resource unit make use of the arithmetic rack. Still others use ten-frames and coins (such as dimes and quarters) to encourage children to recognize and use landmark numbers (tens and twenty-fives) as they calculate. No matter which tool is used - billboards, the arithmetic rack, ten-frames, or coins - each minilesson is crafted as a tightly structured series, or “string,” of computation problems designed to encourage children to look to the numbers first, before they decide on a computation strategy. The strings are likely to generate discussion of certain strategies or big ideas underlying an understanding of early number sense, addition, and subtraction.
Overview
5(7)
Quick Images: Billboards
12(11)
Shoes
Skip-Counting by Twos, Doubles, Near Doubles
A1
13(2)
Dogs
Counting On, Equivalence, Part-Whole Relations, Cardinality
A2
15(1)
Cherries and Potatoes
Counting On, Hierarchical Inclusion, Equivalence, Cardinality
A3
16(1)
Apples
Doubles, Near Doubles
A4
16(1)
Frogs
Using the Five- and Ten-Structures, Compensation, Equivalence, Hierarchical Inclusion
A5
17(1)
Sunflowers
Doubles, Near Doubles
A6
18(1)
Hierarchical Inclusion
A7
19(1)
Peppers
Doubles, Near Doubles
A8
20(1)
Cats
Combinations That Make Ten, Compensation
A9
20(2)
Mixed Billboards
Assessment
A10
22(1)
Quick Images: The Arithmetic Rack
23(21)
Using the Five- and Ten-Structures
B1
24(1)
B2
25(1)
B3
25(1)
Using the Five-Structure, Compensation
B4
26(1)
Using the Five-Structure, Compensation, Making Ten
B5
26(1)
B6
27(1)
Using the Five-Structure, Commutative Property
B7
28(1)
B8
28(1)
Using the Five-Structure, Commutative Property, Doubles and Near Doubles
B9
29(1)
Using the Five- and Ten-Structures, Relating Addition and Subtraction
B10
29(1)
B11
30(1)
B12
30(1)
Combinations That Make Ten, Compensation, Making Ten
B13
31(1)
B14
32(1)
B15
32(1)
Compensation, Making Ten
B16
32(2)
B17
34(1)
B18
34(1)
Returning to Doubles, Near Doubles
B19
34(1)
B20
35(1)
B21
36(1)
B22
36(1)
B23
37(1)
B24
37(1)
B25
37(1)
B26
38(1)
B27
38(1)
Doubles, Compensation
B28
38(1)
B29
39(1)
B30
40(1)
B31
40(1)
B32
41(1)
B33
41(1)
Using the Five- and Ten-Structures, Assessment
B34
41(1)
B35
42(1)
B36
43(1)
Quick Images: Ten-Frames
44(6)
Using the Five- and Ten-Structures
C1
45(1)
C2
46(1)
C3
47(1)
C4
47(1)
Unitizing, Using the Five- and Ten-Structures
C5
48(1)
C6
48(1)
Unitizing, Using the Five- and Ten-Structures, Compensation, Equivalence
C7
49(1)
From the Arithmetic Rack to Automatizing the Facts
50(17)
Partial Use of the Arithmetic Rack
Using the Five- and Ten-Structures, Relating Addition and Subtraction
D1
51(1)
D2
52(1)
D3
53(1)
Individual Arithmetic Racks
Using the Five- and Ten-Structures, Relating Addition and Subtraction
D4
53(1)
D5
54(1)
D6
54(1)
Envisioning the Arithmetic Rack
Using the Five- and Ten-Structures, Doubles and Near Doubles, Compensation
D7
54(1)
D8
55(1)
D9
56(1)
D10
56(1)
D11
57(1)
D12
57(1)
Using the Five- and Ten-Structures, Just Doubles
D13
58(1)
Working on the Basic Facts without Modeling
Using the Five- and Ten-Structures, Doubles and Near Doubles, Relating Addition and Subtraction
D14
58(1)
D15
59(1)
Using the Five- and Ten-Structures, Relating Addition and Subtraction, One More and One Less
D16
60(1)
D17
61(1)
D18
61(1)
D19
62(1)
D20
62(1)
The Money Model
63(4)
Using the Five- and Ten-Structures, Unitizing, Adding Ten, Equivalence
E1
64(1)
E2
65(1)
E3
65(1)
E4
66(1)
E5
66(1)
Appendixes A---J 67