Not Teaching Second graders "How to Subtract"
I have been working hard on a lot of place value up to 1000 concepts with my second graders as well as two digit addition and subtraction. To ties some of this work together, I wanted to investigate our unifix cubes.
When we purchased the unifix cubes, there were 1000. I told my students this and dumped them out. I wanted to know how many I still had (it has been at least 7 years!) I really didn't know how many were there.
We started by trying to estimate how many cubes there were. This was REALLY hard! It helped a lot when a student suggested that we take out 100 as a benchmark. The estimates ranged from 500-1001. The kids organized them into 100's 10's and 1's and we figured out that there were 658 cubes. We wrote the number in expanded form and talked about how that matched the picture and what it meant. Then......
A student said, "Wow! You are missing a lot of cubes!"
and another replied "I think it is over 400!"
and then they all wanted to figure it out. YESSSSS!!!!!
I gave them a few quiet minutes to figure out how many they thought were missing. They had no pencil/paper etc during this part. After everyone was giving me the ready signal, I gave them white boards and had them record what they thought the answer was and how they knew they were right. WOW was I impressed! It is amazing how many strategies they had and how many correct answers I saw. And this is all before anyone has "taught" them how to do 1000-658!
Let me show you some of the strategies!
This student added the 100's, 10's and 1's separately and then knew 900+90+10=1000 |
This student used sketching of base 10 pieces along with horizontally written number sentences |
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