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2.2.6

2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

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Page 1: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

2.2.6

Page 2: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

• While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way to solve this?–What information does multiplying 5 · 7 tell

you about the model? –What information does multiplying 3 · 6 tell

you about the model?

Page 3: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way
Page 4: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

Ronna is making a small flowerbed that is 3 ½ feet by 1 ½ feet. She needs to find the area so she can add the correct amount of fertilizer to the soil. Copy the diagram down.a. Write the area in each of the

four parts of the diagram. b. Write an equation that

represents the sum of the four areas.

c. What multiplication problem could we use to solve this problem

Page 5: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

• Using the process shown in the previous problem, find the area of Ronna’s flowerbed if the dimensions are 1 ½ feet by 5 1/3 feet. Clearly label all dimensions. Write the multiplication problem that can be used to solve this problem.

Page 6: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

Use the steps at the right to solve the following problems.

3 ½ x 1 ½ 1 1/3 x 2 ½

1 1/3 x 3 1/3

Page 7: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

Solve

• 2 ½ feet + 8 inches• 3/8 of a day + ½ of a day + 6 hours• 12.5 meters + 14 kilometers • 5 feet plus 3 yards

Page 8: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

2.3.1

Page 9: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

• Work with your team to decide how Payton can use the data in the table to predict the wingspan of a bat if she knows its body length. Explain how she would do this.

Page 10: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

Which axis represents the length of a bat? Which represents the wingspan? How can you tell? Label each axis.

What is the scale on the horizontal axis?

What is the scale on the vertical axis?

Payton wants her data to be spread out so she can see the relationship clearly. How could she do that?

Page 11: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

Would this make it easier or harder to see the relationship? Why?

Page 12: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

Work with your team to decide on a scale for each axis that will make Payton’s data easy to see.

Then graph Payton’s data properly.

Page 13: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

• Payton found more information about bats. In parts (a) and (b) below, you will use the information she found to make predictions about the bats.– The common vampire bat is native to northern

Mexico and Central and South America. It feeds on the blood of sleeping cows by making very small cuts into their skin and then licking the wounds.

Use your graph of bat length and wingspan to predict the wingspan of the common vampire bat if it typically has a length of about 2.75 inches.

Page 14: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

• The Kitti’s hog-nosed bat, also called the bumblebee bat, is the world’s smallest bat and also the world’s smallest mammal! It lives in Thailand and Myanmar. It weighs less than a tenth of an ounce (less than a penny) and is only about one inch long!

Make a prediction for the wingspan of the Kitti’s hog-nosed bat. Be prepared to explain your thinking to the class.

Page 15: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

• Look at the graphs that your team made in this lesson and compare them to those made by other teams. Work with your team to brainstorm a complete list of information that should go on a graph to make it useful. Be sure to consider each of the questions below. – What information tells you what is shown on each

axis?– What information tells you the exact coordinates of a

point on the graph?– What information tells you what the graph is about?

Page 16: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

• 2.3.2

Page 17: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

• Andre works in his family’s juice shop. He has invented the new Mathberry Madness smoothie, and word is getting around. He wants a graph showing how many new smoothies have been sold throughout the first month. He has gone through the cash-register records and gathered the data for some of the first 12 days, shown in the table at right.

Page 18: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

• He wants to graph his data and use it to predict approximately how many Mathberry Madness smoothies he can expect to sell by Day 20. He has started the graph below right.

• Examine Andre’s graph. Can you use it to predict how many smoothies would be sold by Day 20? Why or why not?

• Decide how to scale the axes so that you cangraph Andre’s data accurately and make a prediction.Then graph it yourself.

Page 19: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

Prediction Time!

• Predict how many smoothies would be sold on day 20 based on your graph.

Page 20: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

• The table at right shows the time it took five different students to get to the mall and how far they traveled to get there.

Page 21: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

• :To use the pool at the Columbus Recreation Center, guests must pay one annual membership fee and then another small fee each time they swim. Jeff and his five friends kept track of how many times they visited the pool in one year and how much money they each spent.

Page 22: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

• Jackson heard that baseball pitchers are getting taller and taller. He found the data shown in the table at right.

• Jackson thought a graph might help him see how the heights are changing, but he thinks that this data will be really hard to graph. Discuss this with your team. Do you agree? What, if anything, makes this data hard to graph? Explain.

Page 23: 2.2.6. While working in class, Stephanie had to do the problem 3/5 x 6/7. She started to draw rectangles to solve the problem. Is there an easier way

• Jackson has an idea! He decided to change the way he wrote the data and started the table shown below. How did Jackson figure out what numbers to put in the table? Discuss this with your team and then copy and complete the table on your own paper.

-On your paper, graph Jackson’s data. Be sure to choose an appropriate scale and label the axes so that it is a complete graph. -Help Jackson predict how tall pitchers might be on average in the year 2020.