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Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns

Lesson 1 of 2

In this lesson:

  • Identify five situation types in any word problem
  • Solve problems with the unknown in the result, change, or start position
  • Represent every problem with a tape diagram and matching equation
Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:

  1. Identify the situation type — adding to, taking from, putting together, taking apart, or comparing
  2. Solve one-step problems within 100 with the unknown in the result position
  3. Solve one-step problems with the unknown in the change or start position, writing an equation with □ for the unknown
  4. Represent any problem with a labeled tape diagram and a matching equation
Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

You Already Know Word Problems

In Grade 1, you solved problems like:

"Lena had 8 apples. She got 5 more. How many does she have now?"

8 + 5 = □

This year: same five problem types, bigger numbers (up to 100), and the unknown can be anywhere.

Let's review all five types — with Grade 2 numbers.

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Situation 1: Adding To

"There were 34 children on a playground. 21 more came out to play. How many children are on the playground now?"

  • Something changes: a quantity grows
  • Action: more come, are added, arrive

Tape diagram: part 34 and part 21 below, total shown as □ above

Equation: 34 + 21 = □

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Situation 2: Taking From

"There were 55 children on the playground. 21 went inside for lunch. How many are still outside?"

  • Something changes: a quantity shrinks
  • Action: some leave, are used, are removed

Tape diagram: whole = 55, one part = 21, missing part = □

Equation: 55 − 21 = □

Same idea as add-to, but the direction is reversed

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Situation 3: Putting Together

"A basket has 34 red apples and 21 green apples. How many apples are in the basket?"

  • Nothing changes: two groups are already there
  • No action: we just count them together

Tape diagram: part = 34, part = 21, total = □

Equation: 34 + 21 = □

⚠️ Notice: The equation looks like add-to — but nothing changes here!

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Situation 4: Taking Apart

"A basket has 55 apples. 34 are red. How many are green?"

  • We know the whole: 55 total
  • We know one part: 34 red
  • We find the other part: ? green

Tape diagram: whole = 55, part = 34, missing part = □

Equation: 55 − 34 = □

The tape diagram tells you which to subtract — not the word order

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Situation 5: Comparing (Preview)

"One box has 55 crayons. Another has 34. How many more crayons does the first box have?"

  • Nothing changes: two groups already exist
  • We ask: how much bigger is one compared to the other?

Two bars side by side — the longer bar shows the bigger amount; the bracket shows the difference

Equation: 55 − 34 = □

(We'll go much deeper on comparison in Deck 2)

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Five Situation Types

Summary: five situation types arranged in a table with tape diagram shapes and equation patterns

Before you solve — identify the type and draw the diagram

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Your Turn: Identify the Type

Read each story. Write the situation type — then draw the tape diagram.

  1. "Mia had 47 stamps. She bought 28 more."
  2. "A jar has 63 beads. 37 are blue. The rest are red."
  3. "Leo has 72 cards. Ava has 54 cards. How many more does Leo have?"

Label the type before you solve!

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Same Story — Three Questions

You can ask the same story three different ways:

  • Result unknown: 34 + 21 = □ — we know both parts, find the total
  • Change unknown: 34 + □ = 55 — we know one part and the total
  • Start unknown: □ + 21 = 55 — we know the change and the total

The tape diagram stays the same — only the box moves to a different position

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Result Unknown (Review)

"There were 34 children. 21 more came out. How many are there now?"

Tape diagram: part 34 and part 21 visible, total shown as dashed □ box above

Equation: 34 + 21 = □ = 55

The box is at the top — we add to find the total

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Change Unknown

"There were 34 children. Some more came out. Now there are 55. How many came out?"

Tape diagram: first part 34, second part is dashed □ box, total 55 labeled above

Equation: 34 + □ = 55

Solve: 55 − 34 = □ = 21

The box moved to the middle — use the inverse operation

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Start Unknown

"Some children were on the playground. 21 more came out. Now there are 55. How many were there at the start?"

Tape diagram: first part is dashed □ box, second part 21, total 55 labeled above

Equation: □ + 21 = 55

Solve: 55 − 21 = □ = 34

The box moved to the beginning — use the inverse operation

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Take-From: Three Versions

Same story, three questions:

Unknown Equation Solve by
Result 55 − 18 = □ Subtract
Change 55 − □ = 37 Subtract: 55 − 37 = □
Start □ − 18 = 37 Add: 37 + 18 = □

⚠️ Watch out: Start unknown + take-from → add to solve!

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Strategy: Draw the Diagram First

For any unknown position:

  1. Read the problem — identify start, change, and result
  2. Draw the tape diagram — put □ where the unknown is
  3. Write the equation — read it from the diagram
  4. Solve using the inverse operation if the unknown is not at the end

The diagram is the bridge between the words and the equation

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Your Turn

Draw the tape diagram, write the equation, and solve:

  1. "There were 47 birds on a wire. Some flew away. Now there are 29. How many flew away?"

    → Identify: take-from, __________ unknown

  2. "Some books were on a shelf. A librarian added 38. Now there are 75. How many were there at the start?"

    → Identify: add-to, __________ unknown

Draw the diagram first — then write the equation

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Key Takeaways

✓ There are five situation types — identify the type before solving
✓ The unknown can be in the result, change, or start position
✓ Draw the tape diagram first — the equation follows from the diagram
✓ Inverse operations solve change-unknown and start-unknown problems

⚠️ Keywords mislead: "more" in a problem ≠ always add
⚠️ Word order misleads: the tape diagram tells you which to subtract
⚠️ Put-together ≠ add-to: nothing changes in put-together

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1
Word Problems: Situation Types and Unknowns | Lesson 1 of 2

Next: Lesson 2

Coming up in Lesson 2:

  • Comparison problems — all three sub-types with the comparison tape diagram
  • Two-step problems — two equations, two unknowns, one story

Connection: the tape diagram skills from today are the foundation for Lesson 2

Get ready to compare and take two steps at a time!

Grade 2 Math | 2.OA.A.1