Take-From Problem
Story: There are 13 grapes on the plate. Jayden eats 5. How many grapes are left?
- Start: 13 grapes
- Change: take away 5
- Result: how many left?
Writing the Equation
Story: 13 grapes, Jayden eats 5, how many left?
Equation:
- 13 is what we started with
- 5 is what we took away
- ☐ is what's left
Answer:
Quick Check
Solve this problem:
8 birds are on a fence. 6 more land. How many birds are on the fence now?
What equation would you write?
What strategy will you use to solve it?
Quick Check - Answer
Problem: 8 birds, 6 more land, how many now?
Equation:
Strategy ideas:
- Count on from 8: "9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14"
- Make 10:
Answer: 14 birds
The Part-Part-Whole Mat
Three sections:
- Whole - the total amount
- Part - one piece
- Part - another piece
Put-Together Problem
Story: There are 14 animals at the farm. 6 are cows and the rest are chickens. How many are chickens?
- Whole: 14 animals (total)
- Part 1: 6 cows
- Part 2: ? chickens
Writing It Two Ways
Problem: 14 animals, 6 cows, rest are chickens
Addition way:
Subtraction way:
Both equations describe the same problem!
Unknowns in Different Positions
The unknown (☐) can be:
- Result unknown:
- most common☐ - Change unknown:
- harder☐ - Start unknown:
- hardest☐
The mat works for all three!
Change-Unknown Problem
Story: Aisha has 7 stickers. She earns some more at school. Now she has 12. How many did she earn?
- Start: 7 stickers
- Change: ? earned
- Result: 12 now
Use counters: Start with 7, add more until you reach 12, then count what you added
Writing the Equation
Problem: Aisha has 7, earns some, now has 12
Equation:
- 7 is the start
- ☐ is the change (what we're finding)
- 12 is the result
Answer: She earned 5 stickers
Your Turn: Start-Unknown
Story: Some birds were in a tree. 6 more flew in. Now there are 11. How many were there at the start?
Think about:
- What is the whole?
- What is one part you know?
- What part are you finding?
Try using your part-part-whole mat
Your Turn - Answer
Problem: Some birds in tree, 6 flew in, now 11
Part-part-whole mat:
- Whole: 11 birds (total now)
- Part 1: ? birds (start)
- Part 2: 6 birds (flew in)
Equation:
Answer: 5 birds were there at the start
Quick Check
Find the unknown:
What strategy will you use?
Quick Check - Answer
Equation:
Strategies:
- Count on from 9 until you reach 15
- Think: "What plus 9 makes 15?"
- Use part-part-whole: 15 is whole, 9 is one part, ? is other part
Answer: 6
Comparison Problems
Comparison is different:
- Not adding or removing anything
- Just looking at two groups
- Finding the difference
Story: Leo has 12 marbles. Sara has 5 marbles. How many more marbles does Leo have than Sara?
Side-by-Side Model
Match up the marbles one-to-one - the unmatched ones show the difference
Writing the Equation
Problem: Leo has 12, Sara has 5, how many more?
Equation:
Or you can think of it as:
Both work - the difference is 7
Start-Unknown Problems
What it means: Finding what you started with
Story: Some children were in the classroom. 4 more walked in. Now there are 11. How many were there at the start?
This is like working backward - you know the total and one part, so find the other part
Solving Start-Unknown
Problem: Some children in room, 4 walked in, now 11
Part-part-whole mat:
- Whole: 11 children (total now)
- Part 1: ☐ children (were there at start)
- Part 2: 4 children (walked in)
Equation:
Answer: 7 children were there at the start
Your Turn: Start-Unknown
Story: Some students were on the bus. 3 more students got on. Now there are 10 students on the bus. How many students were on the bus at the start?
Write the equation with ☐ for the unknown
Try to solve before the next slide
Your Turn - Answer
Problem: ? on bus, 3 got on, now 10
Equation:
Solve:
- Whole: 10 (total now)
- One part: 3 (got on)
- Other part: ? (were there at start)
Answer: 7 students were on the bus at the start
Quick Check
Find the unknown:
What does the ? represent in this equation?
Quick Check - Answer
Equation:
The
Solve:
- Think: "What plus 7 makes 15?"
- Or: "15 minus 7 equals ?"
Answer: 8
Key Takeaways
✓ Four problem types: add to, take from, put together/take apart, compare
✓ Unknowns can be result, change, or start
✓ Use ☐ or ? to show the unknown in equations
✓ Part-part-whole mat works for all problem types
Watch out:
Don't use keywords - understand what's happening in the story
Unknown can be anywhere - not just at the end
Check: Is the big number the total or a part?
Comparison: Don't add or take away - just see the difference
Next Steps
Coming up next: Adding three whole numbers (1.OA.A.2)
Keep practicing:
- Use the part-part-whole mat for all types
- Write equations with unknowns in different positions
- Think about the story, not just keywords
You're ready!