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  • 1st2nd GradeObjective

    CCSS Math/Number and Operations in Base 10/Understand Place Value: 1.NBT.2:

    Understand that the two digits of a two-digit number represent amounts of tens and ones. Understand the following as special cases:

    a. 10 can be thought of as a bundle of ten onescalled a ten.

    b. The numbers from 11 to 19 are composed of a ten and one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight or nine ones.

    c. The numbers 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90 refer to one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight or nine tens (and 0 ones).

    Materials Needed A Fair Bear Share by Stuart J. Murphy Double-Sided Counters [RA522] Colored Craft Sticks [HL150] Craft Sticks [FT2496] (plain) Bundles of 10 recording sheet Place Value Match-Up cards Document camera or chart paper [TA3385] Rubber bands Best-Buy Scissors [TS547]Products with item numbers are available at LakeshoreLearning.com.

    Introduction

    1. Read aloud A Fair Bear Share by Stuart J. Murphy. Pause to point out how the bears count nuts, seeds and berries by putting them in groups of tens with the extras, or ones, left over.

    2. As you point out the bears process, model the way they group nuts, seeds and berries: Use double-sided counters on a document camera or chart to show how the bundling of tens and ones takes place. (For example, on page 13, show how the first cub has 21two piles of 10 with 1 left over.)

    Procedure 1. Divide the class into six different color groups: red, orange, yellow, green, blue and purple.

    2. Tell students that they are going to hunt for something together like the bears in the story. However, instead of gathering nuts or berries for a pie, they will gather colors to make a rainbow! (Note that the last two colors of a rainbow, indigo and violet, have been combined into one color group, purple.)

    3. Scatter some colored craft sticks on the floor around the room. You will want to count them out ahead of time to be sure that there are more than 10 but less than 20 of each color. (For example, count 13 red, 15 orange, 17 yellow, 14 green, 18 blue and 19 purple sticks.)

    4. Have students quietly walk around the room gathering only the sticks in their designated color.

    Lakeshore www.lakeshorelearning.com

  • 5. Once all the sticks are collected, give each group a rubber band and ask students to count out 10 sticks and bundle them together to make a group of ten. Reinforce that the bundle of 10 sticks represents the tens place in a number and the leftover single sticks are the ones.

    6. Invite one group at a time to share the number of sticks they collected. Prompt students to first share how many tens and how many ones they have, and then say the numeral that represents their sticks. (For example, 1 ten bundle and 4 ones = 14 green sticks in all.)

    Guided Practice

    1. Ask students to remain in their small groups and tell them you would like them to work together to solve some problems. Set out the plain craft sticks (250 craft sticks per group) and rubber bands and encourage the groups to use them to solve the problems.

    2. Invite students to pretend they work in a craft stick factory. Tell them that craft sticks must be grouped together in bundles, then placed in a box for shipping.

    3. Write the following on a chart or chalkboard:

    one bundle = 10 craft sticks

    one box = 10 bundles

    4. Using the rules you wrote, pose the following questions to the groups and challenge them to work together to find the answers:

    If you have an order for 100 craft sticks, how many boxes should you send? (1)

    If a box of craft sticks is missing two bundles, how many craft sticks are in the box? (80)

    If a school wants to buy one craft stick for each of 242 students, how many boxes will it need to buy? (3)

    5. Provide a Bundles of 10 recording sheet for each group to solve problems and record answers. As students figure out the answers, invite volunteers from each group to share how they arrived at their solutions. Discuss the various methods of problem solving to help students explore their thinking.

    Independent Practice

    1. Print out a set of Place Value Match-Up cards for each student.

    2. Have students cut apart the cards and mix them up.

    3. Challenge students to match the numbers to their place value by the number picture representation or place value grid.

    4. As a variation, have students play with a partner in a memory-game format. Instruct students to spread out the cards and turn each card facedown. Students then take turns flipping over two cards at a time to see if they are a matching pair. If the cards match, the player keeps the pair. If they dont match, the player turns the two cards facedown again, and the next player takes a turn. The player who collects the greatest number of matches at the end of the game wins!

    Lakeshore www.lakeshorelearning.com

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    4Lakeshore A sample based on our Grab & Match Leveled Place Value Quickies (FF344) www.lakeshorelearning.com

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  • Bundles of 10 Recording Sheet

    If you have an order for 100 craft sticks, how

    many boxes should you send?

    If a box of craft sticks is missing tw

    o bundles, how

    many craft sticks are in the box?

    If a school wants to buy one craft stick for each of 242 students, how

    many boxes w

    ill it need to buy?

    one bundle = 10 craft sticksone box = 10 bundles