Fractions just started to get more interesting for my fourth grade class. The kids started to get excited about the discoveries they were making. What a complete 180 from the week before! (Get it? 180 degrees? One half?)

In the past when I asked my class, "What do you notice about the numbers in the fractions," they would struggle, looking for odds and evens and other coincidences that weren't actually moving their thinking in a direction that would help them with this concept. With this warm up, they actually got the concept halfway through the lesson, and they OWNED it. They felt like they were discovering this on their own. Really powerful!
This was even after I made a joke and asked, "Which numbers are close together, and which are far apart. Not literally."
1 2
3 9
They thought it was funny.

So once again, I asked students to memorize two fractions, this time one that was greater than a half and a fraction that was less than a half, write them on a poster and randomly stick them on the poster. Once again, I was able to rapidly sort them and once again, I asked them to figure out how I was able to do it. And once again, they made some impressive observations that I was able to commemorate in an anchor chart.
They each copied their favorite method, and went back to work on their papers with a new found strategy and way to explain how they know what they learned.
As promised, I posted the coloring page they started the day before for you to download for free for a limited time.

The kids had their quiz on fractions greater than, less than, and equal to a half, in preparation for moving on to, well, the rest of fractions, haha. Luckily we still get to "limit" the fractions that our fourth graders are exposed to. For example, 7ths, 9ths, 11ths, and pretty much anything over 12ths are not in the CCSS. That takes a lot of the pressure off of focusing on the algorithm as the only tried and true method of finding an equivalent fraction.





Love this post!
ReplyDeleteTara
The Math Maniac