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Relations
and graphs
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Grade
Level: 2
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Objective
By the end of the lesson, children should understand the concepts of greater
than, less than and equal to. As well, they will practice making and using
a graph to measure quantities.
Teaching
method and activities
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1. Divide the class into small groups
of four or five (8 or 10 if the class is large) students each. Have the
students draw lines on a large sheet of paper to form a grid. Each square
of the grid should be large enough to contain a letter or a character and
there should be at least 15 squares across and 15 squares down. Each student
can draw his/her own grid, but only one grid per group is needed for this
exercise. Perhaps the others could be saved and used for another lesson.
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2. Each group member should print
his or her own name as well as the name of a friend on the paper, with one
letter in each box. There should be a total of 8 to ten names on the single
piece of grid paper. |
3. Have the students refer to the
names on the grid paper to answer these questions: Who has the longest name?
Who has the shortest name? Can you find someone with a name the same length
as yours? Can you find someone whose name has one more (or one less) letter
than your name? |
4. On the board, organize the names into some type of graph. Plot the
names on the graph by length. Ask students questions such as: Which name
length is most popular? [fill in name] was not here today. Where should
his/her name go on our graph? Can you think of anyone with a shorter name
than [fill in name]?
Time
30-40 minutes
Materials
Paper, pencils, straightedge (ruler or edge of a book) From: Mack, Nancy.
Bosnia Project: Elementary Mathematics Module: Patterns, Relationships,
& Number Sense. University of Pittsburgh.
SUGGESTIONS/MODIFICATIONS
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- One model can be made on the board if there is not enough paper.
- You may use the children's height as a model of a bar graph by having
a few children stand and showing the differences in their heights, as
the rest of the children draw the children's height into a graph.
- To make the lesson more complicated you can compare first names, last
names, and nicknames.
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Source
Mack,
Nancy. Bosnia Project: Elementary Mathematics Module: Patterns, Relationships,
& Number Sense. University of Pittsburgh. |
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