In this lesson:
By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
In Lesson 1, something always happened:
Today: nothing happens. Two groups already exist.
"Our class has 28 books. The class next door has 19 books."
The question: "How do they compare?"
New diagram shape → new kind of thinking
"How many more books does our class have?"
Equation: 28 − 19 = □ or 19 + □ = 28
Which quantity is unknown? The diagram shows you — before you write the equation
The word "more" in a problem description ≠ always add
Rephrase from the other side — the diagram stays the same
Draw the comparison tape diagram, write the equation, and solve:
"Alex has 82 stickers. Alex has 25 more than Sam. How many stickers does Sam have?" → "More" appears — but what kind of unknown is this?
"A red ribbon is 64 cm long. A blue ribbon is 47 cm long. How much longer is the red ribbon?"
Draw the two bars first — then decide which equation to write
So far: one story → one equation.
Two-step problems: one story → two events → two equations
"There were 52 birds. 17 flew away. Then 8 more landed."
The answer to step 1 becomes the starting point for step 2
Every two-step problem has two events:
Key rule: write a separate equation for each event
Never skip the intermediate step — it shows your reasoning
"There were 52 birds on a wire. 17 flew away. Then 8 more birds landed. How many are on the wire now?"
Step 1: 52 − 17 = □₁ = 35 Step 2: 35 + 8 = □₂ = 43
"The art room had 38 brushes. The teacher found 14 more. Then students used 9 brushes. How many are in the art room now?"
Step 1: 38 + 14 = □₁ = 52 (teacher finds more)
Step 2: 52 − 9 = □₂ = 43 (students use some)
Circle the intermediate answer — carry it to Step 2
Four-step strategy:
Common mistake: writing "52 − 17 + 8 = □" hides the two-step structure
Always write two separate labeled equations
"There were 64 children in the cafeteria. 28 went back to class. Then 15 more came in for lunch. How many children are in the cafeteria now?"
Step 1: ______ − ______ = □₁ = ______
Step 2: ______ + ______ = □₂ = ______
Label each step — circle the intermediate answer before moving to Step 2
"Tomas had some books. He gave 14 to the library. His teacher gave him 6 new books. Now Tomas has 28 books. How many did he start with?"
Start unknown — work backwards from the end!
Step 2 first: 28 − 6 = ______ (he had this many after giving books away)
Step 1: ______ + 14 = ______ (he started with this many)
✓ Comparison problems use two side-by-side bars with a bracket for the difference ✓ Three comparison sub-types: difference unknown, larger unknown, smaller unknown ✓ Two-step problems need two separate labeled equations — one per event ✓ Circle the intermediate answer and carry it forward to the next step
Keywords mislead: draw the tape diagram before writing any equation Word order misleads: the longer bar is always the whole — subtract the shorter from it Two-step = two equations: never combine into one expression
What you can now do:
Next: 2.OA.A.2 — Fluency with addition and subtraction within 20
The word problem skills you built in both lessons will be used every year from now on!
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Use addition and subtraction within 100 to solve one- and two-step word problems