Longview ISD4th Grade Math Unit 4
4th Grade TEKS with Specificities4.2Number, operation, and quantitative reasoning. The student describes and compares fractional parts of whole objects or sets of objects. The student is expected to:
4.2Ause concrete objects and pictorial models to generate equivalent fractions
Include:
- Students generate a pattern of concrete fractions
- Students explain the relationship between the concrete patterns
- Students record the abstract fractions after the relationship is understood
- Solve problems/compare pairs of fractions and recognize equivalent fractions in simplest form.
- Use non-examples (3/4 does not equal 1/2)Helpful manipulatives:
- Tiles, pattern blocks, fraction bars, Cuisenaire rods
Include:
- Recognize objects greater than one concretely and pictorially
- numerator and denominator, whole numbers, improper fractions (fractions greater than 1 ex. 8/5) , proper fractions, and mixed numbers Helpful manipulatives:
- tiles, pattern blocks, Cuisenaire rods, fraction strips
Include:
- Fractions equal to, less than, and greater than one whole
- Compare 2 fractions w/ symbols <, >, =
- Recognize simplest forms of fractions
- numerator and denominator, simplest form
Include:
- Symbols such as 1/10, 0.1
- Record models and pictures
- Students should demonstrate 1/10 is the same value as 0.1 and 1/100, 0.01 (explain by using place value)
- Relate fractions to decimals (ex. 1/2 to 0.5 to 0.50)
- Base Ten Pieces for understanding, place value mats, number lines, fraction bars, color tiles, money
4.3Badd and subtract decimals to the hundredths place using concrete objects and pictorial models
Include:
- Students must build concrete objects, draw pictorial models, and connect the abstract numbers
- Apply addition/subtraction concepts
4.10ALocate and name points on a number line using whole numbers, fractions such as halves and fourths, and decimals such as tenths
Include:
- Number lines do not always begin with "0"
- Concept of points on a line
- Pictorial representations
- Whole numbers, halves, and fourths
- Decimals of tenths (1/10 = 0.1)
Vocabulary Adventure
- Fraction p. 5
- Denominator p. 7
- Numerator p. 9
- Equivalent fractions p. 11
- Mixed number p. 13
- Improper fraction p. 15
- Decimal number p. 17
- Number line p. 65
Mathematical Thinking at Grade 4
- Investigation 2 “How Many Dollars?” (sessions 1-2 completed in Unit 1) Sessions 3 & 4 may be used to review/practice adding and subtracting decimal values.
Investigation 1 Parts of Squares: Halves, Fourths, and Eighths—Sessions 1-5
Investigation 2 Parts of Rectangles: Thirds, Sixths, and Twelfths—Sessions 1-4
Investigation 3 Ordering Fractions—Sessions 1-5
MathLearningCenter
Teacher Reference Manual
Chapter 8 Fractions (pp. 69-75)
Volume I—Contact
- Lessons 31-35 Fraction Bars
- Lesson 58 Money & Fractions
- Lessons 73-75 Fraction Bar Chart
- Lessons 114-116 Say It, See It, Show It—Fraction Bars
- Lessons 148-153 Modeling Fractions with Pattern Blocks
- Lesson 157 Maps—Fractions
- Lesson 38 “Little House” Problem
Number Concepts section
- Complete the Square
- Build a Whole
- Name My Fractional Parts
- Fractions with Playing Cards
- Big Blank Number Line (includes number cards)
Chapter 3 Decimals Lessons 14-16
Chapter 6 Fractions Lessons 31-35
Math Essentials
- Fractions and decimals pp. 9-24
- Number lines pp. 93-96
“Find/Look for a Pattern”
- Count On Itpp. 34-39
- Problem Solver II
Teaching Problem 14, p. 28
- Measuring Up pp. 107-108
- Count On It pp. 18-19
- Measuring Up pp. 59-60
8/27/07DRAFT 3