beginning of the year…
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Beginning of the year…. Five Little Monkeys Jumping On The Bed By Eileen Christelow. Lesson 1. Read book Count monkeys on the page Match monkeys on book to stuffed monkeys Model counting again with stuffed monkeys jumping on the bed. Lesson 2. Act out book Count ‘monkeys’ (actors) - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Beginning of the year…
Five Little Monkeys Jumping On The BedBy Eileen Christelow
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Lesson 1
• Read book• Count monkeys on the page • Match monkeys on book to stuffed monkeys• Model counting again with stuffed monkeys
jumping on the bed
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Lesson 2
• Act out book• Count ‘monkeys’ (actors)– Teacher modeling movement, one-to-one, correct
rote sequence
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Lesson 3
• Teacher demonstrates counting plastic monkeys (different arrangement) on Elmo
• ‘Think aloud’ good counting techniques• Provide cups with different amounts of plastic
monkeys in – Have students practice counting and checking
each other’s* Ask ‘What was different
today?’
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Lesson 4• Count out cubes on the Elmo (these
‘represent’ monkeys• Provide students with cups containing more
than 5 cubes (7 or 8)• Ask students to count out 5 monkeys (cubes)
into a pile
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Lesson 5• Teacher models counting out 5 monkeys
(cubes) on a paper bed on the Elmo• Add one more and ask “How many monkeys
are on my bed now?”• Pass out copies of bed • Call out number, and have students count that
number of monkeys (cubes) on bed• Have them +1, or -1• Ask “How many now?”
(How many what?)6
Monkeys Jumping on 2 Beds• Compare Groups (Greater than, less than, equal to)• Decompose numbers less than or equal to 10
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How many monkeys under the covers?
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Monkeys Jumping on 5 Frame Bed
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Sorting Monkeys• Classify objects into given
categories; count the number of objects in each category
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Algebraic Thinking• Decompose numbers less than or equal to
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How many monkeys do you see?
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How many monkeys do you see?
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How many monkeys do you see?
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How many monkeys do you see?
How many monkeys do you see?
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How many monkeys do you see?
Counting• Know they can assign each item in a
set one number from the number-word sequence (1:1)
• Know their count remains the same regardless of the size shape or color of objects or the arrangement
• Keep track of the items they have counted
• Recognize the last word they use represents the total number of items in the set
• Understand they can count the objects in any order and the total will remain the same
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What do good counters do?
Additional Resources• Alignment documents – Learning progressions– Math practices
• ODE website – www.ode.state.oh.us– Model Curriculum, CCS, other resources
• Common Core website – www.corestandards.org• commoncoretools.wordpress.com – progressions and articles
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