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Number
Patterns
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Grade
Level: 3-5
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Objective
By the end of the lesson, children should have solid understanding of
basic numbers and understand that numbers can be represented in different
ways. Specifically, students will learn about sets, will be able to practice
writing numbers, and will go through a process of discovery. This should
first be an oral lesson, it can then be repeated as a written lesson.
Teaching
method and activities: Full class participation;
discovery
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1.
Check that the children can count from 1 to 25 in the language you are using.
Practice having the class count 1 through 25 two or three times. |
2.
Have the whole class stand up. Ask them basic questions and have them answer
all together orally: |
- How
many hands do you have?
- How
many fingers do you have?
- How
many fingers do you have...on one hand?
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Make
sure that no student remains silent.
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3.
Now ask questions and have the students answer by showing rather than speaking: |
- Show
me something you have two of.
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Show me something you have only one of.
- Show
me something you have five of.
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4.
Ask the children how many ears one person has. After everyone agrees that
each person has two ears, bring students to a particular area of the learning
space (the front or the side) one by one, and as they move to the area,
ask the students how many ears there are, total. If they know how to read
and write numbers on the board, write: Person 1 2 3 4 5 etc. # Ears 2 4
6 8 10 etc. Repeat this for items in groups of fives, tens, and any other
pattern. |
5.
Take a short break. |
6.
Ask the class: |
- How
can I get 6 eyes?
- How
can I get 25 fingers?
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7.
Then the questions can become more difficult: |
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How can I get 7 eyes?
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How can I get 9 hands?
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8.
As the class becomes more advanced, ask them how they can make a number
in different ways, and ask how many different ways they can think of. Some
examples: |
- They
can get 7 eyes by getting seven people with one eye covered each or
by getting 3 people with two eyes and one person with 1 eye covered.
- They
can get 8 fingers with four people showing 2 fingers each.
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Time
30-40 minutes
Materials
You do not need any specific materials for this lesson. However, you may
want to write on the board (with a board and chalk) or mark a space for
students to stand in for item 4.
Activity
This is a continuation of the idea that numbers have patterns.
The
Lesson
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1.
Tell the class to call off the numbers as usual….1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,…… |
2.
Then you should form a double line: 1 and 2 3 and 4 5 and 6 7 and 8, etc.….
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3.
Introduce the word 'pair' and explain that these are pairs. Ask the question:
How many pupils in each pair? |
4.
The number on the left is called ODD number. The number on the right is
called and EVEN number. Lead the class to realize that an EVEN number is
one more or one less than an odd number. |
5.
Can two even numbers follow each other? How do we recognize even and odd
numbers ? Even numbers will always end in…. ? Odd numbers will always end
in… ? |
6. Where do we see even and odd? One answer: The pages of a book where
the even numbers is always on the right
The
Teaching Method This is a simple lesson teaching ONE THING
and relating it to other things in life
Remember!
Something which now seems simple to you like even and odd numbers is something
which your teacher also took time to teach you. If you teach the simple
things well, the difficult things will soon fall into place.
SUGGESTIONS/MODIFICATIONS
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- Students
may write down their answers to the oral questions in order to practice
writing.
- Students
may make a number list and use differently colored pencils or crayons
in order to mark the even and odd numbers. Students may make a calendar
and mark the even and odd days accordingly; the teacher may make signs
marking even and odd numbers for the class The specific target is: even
numbers and odd numbers. For this lesson you will need a book to show
the even and odd numbers.
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Source:
The Spark handbook: A guide in Zambia's community schools. Zambia:
UNICEF |
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