Title: Addition
1Addition
2Terminology
- Be sure to know the following
- Addend
- Missing Addend
- Commutative Property of Addition
- Associative Property of Addition
- Identity Element for Addition
- Equality Rule
3What are the Preskills?
- Beginning Stage?
- Multi-digit Addition?
4Beginning StageIntroducing the Concept
- Why use semi-concrete objects (lines)?
- Why teach the equality rule?
- How do you teach the equality rule?
- Format 7.1
5Beginning Addition
- What are these?
- Addition the Slow Way
- Missing Addend Addition
- Addition the Fast Way
6Addition the Slow Way
7Addition the Slow Way
- How? Format 7.2
- Students read the equation
- Students state the equality rule
- Students draw lines for first and second addend
- Students count all the lines on this side
- Students use the equality rule and draw the same
number of lines on the other side - Students write the numeral for the lines on the
other side
8Addition the Slow Way
- What examples should one include?
9Missing Addend AdditionFormat 7.3
- Start with the side that tells how many lines to
draw (the box does not tell how many lines to
draw) - Draw lines on that side
- Draw lines on the other sidefor numeral and
lines under the box to make the sides equal - The lines under the box tell you what numeral to
write in the box
10Addition the Fast WayFormat 7.4
- How is this different from the slow way?
11Addition the Fast WayFormat 7.4
- When are the students ready for addition the fast
way? - What potential pattern of errors might the
students make? - How do you remedy this error?
12Sequencing
- When can you begin subtraction (concept)?
- When can you start addition facts instruction?
13Diagnosis and Remediation4 Steps
- Diagnosis Analyze pattern of errors if
necessary ask student to solve a problem
thinking aloud - Determine type of pattern of errors(component-skil
l or strategy) (Later fact errors) - Determine how to re-teach/remedy
- Determine examples (problems)
14Diagnosis and Remediation
- What is a component skill pattern of errors?
- How, in general, do you remedy a component error?
15Diagnosis and Remediation
- What is a pattern of strategy errors?
- What is the remedy for a pattern of strategy
errors?
16Multi-digit Addition
- Multi-digit addition without renaming
- Multi-digit addition with renaming
- More that 2 multi-digit addends with renaming
17Multi-digit Addition without Renaming
- When can these problems be introduced?
- How?
- Students read the problem
- Teacher tells students that we start adding in
the ones column and then the tens (Why?) - Students write the answer in each column
18Multi-digit Addition with Renaming
19Multi-digit Addition with Renaming
- Adding three single-digit numbersFormat 7.5
- What are the example selection guidelines for
these problems?
20Multi-digit Addition with Renaming
- Format 7.6
- Students read the problem
- Identify where to start adding (ones)
- Add the ones and determine if they must rename
- Use expanded notation to determine the number for
the tens and ones column - Write the renamed number and ones number
- Add the first two numbers in then tens, then add
the next number to the sum - Write the tens number
21Multi-digit Addition with Renaming
- Format 7.6
- What is the common error?
- What should the teacher do?
22Multi-digit Addition with Renaming
- Format 7.6
- Example selection for Structured Board and
Structured Worksheet? - Example selection for Less Structured Worksheet?
233 or More Multi-digit Addends with Renaming
- Why are these particularly difficult?
243 or More Multi-digit Addends with Renaming
- How are the complex addition facts sequenced?
25Diagnosis and Remediation4 Steps
- Diagnosis Analyze pattern of errors if
necessary ask student to solve a problem
thinking aloud - Determine type of pattern of errors (fact,
component, or strategy) - Determine how to re-teach/remedy
- Determine examples (problems)
26Pattern of Errors--Facts
- Most common
- Pattern of errorswhat do you look for?
- How do you remedy missing the same fact?
- How do you remedy inconsistent fact errors?
27Pattern of ErrorsComponent Skill
- Example Carrying the wrong number
- Remediation (Go back to teaching the component
skill) - Reteach expanding notation for the total in the
ones column - Practice examples can have a box for the carried
number and ones number - Practice examples should include problems with
and without renaming
28Pattern of ErrorsStrategies
- Example Not regrouping
- Reteach For all strategy errors reteach the
format for that particular strategy - Examples Structured board, structured
worksheet, then less structured. - Then a worksheet similar to original
29Diagnosis and Remediation
- Figure 7.2
- What are the 4 steps?
30Subtraction
31Subtraction
- First Stageconceptual and simple problems
- Multi-digit stage3 types of column subtraction
- without borrowing,
- simple borrowing problems, and
- complex with multiple borrowing and/or zero
32Introducing the Concept of Subtraction
- Conceptsemi concrete
- Strategy subtracting lines
33Introducing the Concept of Subtraction
- How do students use the crossing-out strategy?
- 6 4 ?
- 1)
- 2)
- 3)
34Introducing the Concept of Subtraction
- Example selection
- Format 8.1 What is the difference between the
examples in the structured worksheet and the less
structured worksheet? Why?
35Introducing the Concept of Subtraction
- Missing Subtrahend Problems
- What are they?
- When do you teach them?
- How do you teach them?
36Introducing the Concept of Subtraction
- Missing Subtrahend Problems
- 9 ? 4
- Read the problem
- Draw lines under minuend (first number)
- Students figure out what number them must end up
with - Students circle the number of lines that they
must end up with - Students cross out (minus) the lines that are not
circled - Students count the number of crossed outlines and
put that number in the box
37Diagnosis and Remediation
- What are the three classes of error diagnoses?
38Diagnosis and Remediation
- What are 4 steps in diagnosis and remediation
(Kinders) - Hypothesis of error pattern, confirm with through
student interview - Identify class of errorfact, component,
strategy - Identify how you would reteach
- Describe the examples that you would use when
reteaching and after (return to original
worksheet problem types)
39Diagnosis and Remediation
- What is a common component error on worksheets?
- How do you remediate this?
40Multi-digit Subtraction Stage
- Column subtraction without renaming
- Subtraction with renaming
- Complex renaming problems
41Subtraction with Renaming
42Subtraction with Renaming
- Format 8.2concept of regrouping (semi concrete)
43Subtraction with Renaming
- Format 8.3
- Part A
- What is the rule?
- Example selection?
- Part B
- Borrowing component skill
44Subtraction with Renaming
- Format 8.3 Ccomputation summary
- Read the problem
- Determine if we must rename
- Borrow the ten and put it with the ones
- Subtract the ones column
- Subtract the tens column
45Subtraction with Renaming
- Format 8.3
- What types of problems should one include on less
structured?
46Subtraction with renaming
- Renaming from tens
- ¾ subtraction ½ require renaming
- ¼ addition
- Renaming from 100s
- Mostly subtraction
- ½ rename from 100s
- ¼ rename from 10s
- ¼ no renaming
47Complex Renaming Problems
- Problems requiring renaming more than once
(without zeros) - Possible errors?
48Complex Renaming Problems
- Problems with zeros
- Strategy?
- Preskill?
- Format 8.5 Astructured board, Bstructured
worksheet, Cless-structured worksheet
49Complex Renaming Problems
- Format 8.5 Cless-structured worksheet
- What are the example selection guidelines?
50Diagnosis of Errors
- First, specify the error pattern
- Next, identify if this is a fact, component, or
strategy error - See examples on page 129-131
51Remediation of Errors
- Specify specifically what the teacher would
do/say in reteaching (remediation) - Determine examples that would be used in
reteaching (remediation) - See page 131
52Multiplication
53Review
- What is the difference between a correction and a
diagnosis and remediation? - What are the 3 types or classes of diagnoses?
- Describe each.
54Two Stages of Multiplication
- What are they?
- What are the preskills for introducing
multiplication? - What are the preskills for the second stage?
55Multiplication Introducing the Concept
- Single-digit Multiplication
- Missing-Factor Multiplication
- Diagnosis and Remediation
56Multiplication Introducing the Concept
57Multiplication Introducing the Concept
- Steps in Format 9.1
- Picture demonstration
- Reading problems (as count bys)
- Structured board solving problemcounting by a
number x timesand structured worksheet - Less structured worksheet (What type of problems
are included?)
58Format 9.1
- What predictable problems will students have with
saying the numbers as they touch their extended
fingers? - What do you do?
59Missing-factor Multiplication
- What is this a preskill for?
- Steps 5 x ? 30
- Count by 5
- Hold up a finger as you count until you get to 30
- Count the number of fingers extendedput that in
the box
60Format 9.2 Missing-factor Multiplicaton
- Structured Board and Structure WorksheetWhat
types of problems? - Independent WorksheetWhat types of problems?
61Multiplication Introducing the Concept
- Diagnosis and Remediation
- Will there be fact errors? Why?
- What types of component errors might we expect?
(Figure 9.3, page 148)
62Multiplication Introducing the Concept
- Remediation for component errors?
- Skip counting incorrectly
- Consistently off by one count-by number
63Multiplication Introducing the Concept
- Remediation for strategy errors?
- Confuse addition and multiplication
- Confuse regular multiplication and missing factor
multiplication
64Multi-digit Multiplication
- Algorithms based on distributive property of
multiplication. - 5 x 67
- What are the long and short algorithms?
65Multi-digit Multiplication
- What are the preskills?
- How is each preskill taught?
66Multi-digit Multiplication
- Sequence
- Single digit x multiple digit without renaming,
- 24
- x 2
- Single digit x multiple digit with renaming,
- 24
- x 3
- Format 9.3
67Multi-digit Multiplication
- Sequence cont.
- Two-digit x two-digit
- Two-digit x three-digit
68Multi-digit Multiplication
- Format 9.4 Steps
- Part AOrder of multiplication
- Part BStructure boardmodeling the algorithm
(What is critical in this model?) - Part CStructured worksheet
- Part DLess structured worksheet (What problem
types?
69Multi-digit Multiplication
- Diagnosis and Remediation
- Can we have fact errors? Why?
- When do you remediate fact errors? How?
- What are common component errors?
70Division
71Review
- What are common instructional features across the
operations (addition, subtraction,
multiplication, and division)? - What is the identity property?
- What is the commutative property?
- What is the associative property?
- What is the distributive property?
72Division
- What are the two stages of instruction?
- What are the preskills for introducing division?
73Division Stage One
- Problems without remainders
- Format 10.1
- A Translation of problem (How do you translate
problems?) - B Structured boardworking the problem by
dividing lines and writing the answer in the
correct place - C D Worksheets with lines drawn
74Division Stage One
- Problems with remainders
- Why are these important?
- Format 10.2
- A Demonstrate with lines when another group
cannot be formedother lines are the remainder - B C Worksheets with line showing students
where to write stuff (that is what they call it
in higher mathematics!)
75Division Stage One
- Remainder Factsmentally computing facts
including remainders - Format 10.3
- A Teacher presents a diagram circling multiples
and models how many times the multiple goes into
various numbers with a remainder - B Teacher tests students using the diagram
76Division Stage One
- Remainder Factsmentally computing facts
including remainders - Format 10.3
- C Worksheetstudents determine the quotient,
multiply and subtract to determine the remainder - Worksheet follows the sequence of fact
introduction, includes earlier sets and some
problems that do not have remaindersWHY?and
some with quotients of zero.
77Division Stage OneDiagnosis and Remediation
- Fact errors
- Component errors
- Quotient that is too small or too large
- Subtraction error
- Placing remainder and quotient wrong
78Division Stage OneDiagnosis and Remediation
- How do you remediate these component errors?
- Quotient that is too small or too large
- Subtraction error
- Placing remainder and quotient wrong
79Division Stage OneDiagnosis and Remediation
- Quotient that is too small or too large
- Format 10.4, compare remainder to the divisor or
Format 10.5, showing that if they cannot subtract
the answer is too big, then return to original
worksheet
80Division Stage OneDiagnosis and Remediation
- Subtraction error
- Reteach subtraction (with regrouping)provide
division problems partially completedhave
subtract. Then return to the original worksheet
and complete full problems - Placing remainder and quotient wrong
- Reteach where to put answer and remainder,
structured worksheet focusing on placement of
quotient and remainder, then return to original
worksheet
81Multi-digit Division Problems
- What are the long and short forms?
- Which is used most commonly?
- What are the preskills?
- What determines the difficulty of these problems?
82Multi-digit Division ProblemsTwo-digit Quotients
- What are the steps in the short form algorithm?
83Multi-digit Division ProblemsTwo-digit Quotients
- What are the steps in the short form algorithm?
- S read the problem
- S underline the part they work first
- S determine and write answer to first part
- S multiply, subtract and bring down
- S read new problem and determine answer
- S write answer over digit just brought down
- S multiply and subtract to determine remainder
- S say the problem and answer
84Multi-digit Division Problems
- Demonstrate Format 10.6
- What is the critical part when there is a zero in
the quotient? - How can students self-check their division?
85Multi-digit Division ProblemsTwo-digit Divisors
- Lengthy and complex algorithm!
- What are the steps in the algorithm suggested by
our text?
86Multi-digit Division ProblemsTwo-digit Divisors
- S read the problem
- S underlines the part to work first
- S writes the rounded-off problem
- S computes the division problem using the answer
from the rounded-off problem - S multiplies and subtracts (if possible)
- S adjusts the quotient if needed (if you cant
subtract make the answer smaller, if the
remainder is too big, make the answer bigger - S completes the problem and reads the problem and
answer
87Multi-digit Division ProblemsTwo-digit Divisors
- What additional preskills (in addition to
single-digit divisor problems) do students need? - 10.8A Multiplying horizontally
- Model 10.8B (rounded-off problems) C (entire
strategy)
88Multi-digit Division ProblemsTwo-digit Divisors
- What do you do when the estimated quotient does
not yield the correct answer?
89Multi-digit Division ProblemsTwo-digit Divisors
- Format 10.9
- Rule If you cant subtract, make the answer
smaller if the remainder is too big, make the
answer bigger