STANDARDS

CCSS: 4.NBT.B.4, MP3, MP4, MP8

TEKS: 4.4A

Lesson: Wild Technology

Objective: Students will add numbers that require regrouping to learn facts about technology that is helping save endangered animals.

Lesson Plan

    Spark Engagement.

Play the video “What Are Endangered Animals?” Then before or after reading the article, discuss the following questions:

  • What types of technology could be used to view animals safely from a distance?
  • What are some of the costs associated with saving endangered species?

    Introduce the math concept and vocabulary.

  • Display or write the number 436. How many hundreds are in this number? (4) Tens? (3) Ones? (6)
  • How would you write 436 in expanded form? 400 + 30 + 6
  • Have students use or draw place value blocks to represent the number.
  • Add 5 ones to your blocks. What do you notice? (Students should recognize that there are 11 ones and that they can trade in 10 ones for 1 ten.)
  • What number do you have now? (441)
  • Then play the math video “Addition With Regrouping.”

    Work through the "What to Do" box.

  • We can add numbers in different ways. One strategy for adding numbers is to decompose, or break them apart, into unit form.
  • What happened to the 11 tens in the example? (It was regrouped by trading in 10 tens for 1 hundred. Then the 1 hundred was added to the 6 hundreds and the 1 ten remained.)
  • How might the unit form method help you avoid making a mistake while adding? (Answers will vary.)

    Reinforce with math practice.

Have students complete problems 1 through 4 on pages 7-9 of the article.

Differentiate & Extend

Skills Sheets: Level Down: Adding With Base Ten Blocks (3.NBT.A.2) | On Level: DynaDash: Addition With Regrouping (4.NBT.B.4) | Level Up: Adding Large Numbers (4.NBT.B.4)

Math Video: Addition With Regrouping

Game: Jewel Addition

DynaMath@Home: Have students gather at least 10 objects each to represent the different place values. For example: hundreds (sheets of paper), tens (crayons), and ones (cereal pieces). Have them create different 2- or 3-digit numbers with their objects and add an amount to find the total. Students should write and solve the equation that matches the numbers they created with their objects.

Download a printable PDF of this lesson plan.

Share an interactive Google Slides version of this lesson with your students.

videos (2)
videos (2)
Skills Sheets (5)
Skills Sheets (5)
Skills Sheets (5)
Skills Sheets (5)
Skills Sheets (5)
Lesson Plan (2)
Lesson Plan (2)
Text-to-Speech