Classroom-Ready Number Talks for Kindergarten, First and Second Grade Teachers: 1,000 Interactive Activities and Strategies that Teach Number Sense and Math Facts
By Nancy Hughes
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About this ebook
Bringing the exciting teaching method of number talks into your classroom has never been easier. Simply choose from the hundreds of great ideas in this book and get going!
From activities on addition and subtraction to fractions and decimals, Classroom-Ready Number Talks for Kindergarten, First and Second Grade Teachers includes:
- Grade-level specific strategies
- Number talk how-tos
- Visual and numerical examples
- Scaffolding suggestions
- Common core alignments
- Questions to build understanding
Reduce time spent lesson-planning and preparing materials and enjoy more time engaging your students in learning important math concepts! These ready-to-use number talks are sure to foster a fresh and exciting learning environment in your classroom, as well as help your students increase their comprehension of numbers and mathematical principles.
Nancy Hughes
Nancy Hughes spent the last 10 years as the K–12 mathematics coordinator at Olathe Public Schools, the largest school district in the Kansas City region, where her responsibilities included providing professional development for mathematics teachers in all grade levels. Prior to Olathe, Hughes taught middle school math in Kansas City–area public and private schools. Hughes has presented on math topics at the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, Kansas City Area Teachers of Mathematics, and Kansas Area Teachers of Mathematics conferences. Hughes also directed the Kauffman Foundation K–16 Professional Development Program. Hughes has a BS from Kansas State University and an MS in curriculum and instruction from Kansas University.
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Classroom-Ready Number Talks for Kindergarten, First and Second Grade Teachers - Nancy Hughes
Introduction
History of Number Talks
Number talks were initially developed in the 1990s by Kathy Richardson and Ruth Parker in response to a professional development session for teachers. Although they have been around for some time, I didn’t learn about number talks until 2010, when a sales representative gave me a complimentary copy of Sherry Parrish’s Number Talks: Helping Children Build Mental Math and Computational Strategies. At the time, I was looking for a way to support mental math and computational strategies in the math classroom, and Parrish’s book provided that needed support.
Much of my work with number talks, including this book, is based on earlier work of Richardson, Parker, and Parrish. Parrish’s initial suggestions on setting up and executing an effective number talk can be easily implemented when working with students in any setting. This book’s intent is to provide examples of number talks based on specific reasoning strategies aligned to Common Core math fluency standards. These reasoning strategies provide support for struggling learners by suggesting concrete and pictorial representations, as well as abstract mental computational strategies appropriate for the grade level.
Importance of Number Talks
There are many benefits to utilizing number talks on a daily basis. Number talks are a valuable classroom routine for developing efficient computational strategies, making sense of math, and communicating mathematical reasoning. A number talk is structured to help students conceptually understand math without memorizing a set of rules and procedures. Instead, they help students understand numerical relationships, such as composing (putting together existing numbers) and decomposing (breaking numbers into their subparts), using the base ten system, and learning properties of operations.
The primary goal for a number talk is to improve computational fluency (flexibility with computational methods, ability to explain and discuss a reasoning strategy, and computation with accuracy). Sharing math strategies during a number talk clarifies the student’s thinking and helps develop the language of math. Students learn that numbers are made up of smaller numbers that can be composed and decomposed to make new numbers. They have the opportunity to think first and self-correct if needed.
Below are seven great components of a number talk, the first being most important. Number talks should help students:
• Build computational fluency
• Continue mental computation practice, which builds fluent retrieval of basic facts
• Actively engage in learning
• Focus on number sense and mathematical communication
• Elicit efficient and accurate computational skills
• Understand the relationships between numbers by modeling strategies
• Move from concrete to representational to abstract thinking
If your goal is to improve computational skills, number talks are extremely useful, whether in the classroom, as an intervention, in homeschool settings, or for parents wanting to improve their child’s math skills.
Format of a Number Talk
A daily number talk provides five to ten minutes for students to build fluent retrieval of basic arithmetic facts.
• Select a math problem for the class
• Provide wait time for all students to come up with an answer and a strategy
• Students use mental math, not paper and pencil, to find a solution
• Students give a thumbs-up when they have a solution or strategy
• Randomly call on a few students to give their answers
• Record student strategies and thinking for all to see
• Ask several students to share their strategies
• Students make corrections if needed
• Students decide which answer is correct
• If necessary, model explicit strategies and multiple examples
Conceptual Understanding Leads to Procedural Fluency
Math is a skill that must be developed over time, and it is essential that basic skills are practiced and reinforced daily. Number talks are a powerful way to enable students to become mathematical thinkers, efficient and accurate with computation, and ready to problem solve.
In order for students to be proficient in their mathematical thinking and reasoning, it is important that they have a strong understanding of number relationships. Number talks help students see the relationships between numbers by discussing and sharing various computational strategies. Teaching, reviewing, and reinforcing reasoning strategies gives students the tools they need for lifelong learning. Each student will comprehend math differently, so teaching multiple strategies in a variety of ways is necessary for all students to make sense of math.
The number one complaint from teachers is that struggling learners do not know their basic facts and cannot compute or reason with numbers. However, math is built on effort, not ability. Early math deficits have devastating effects on later learning. It is essential for students to understand computation so they will become procedurally fluent. Fluency involves knowing reasoning strategies and when to use them. Students must be not only flexible with numbers, but they must be efficient and accurate as well. For example, counting on fingers is a strategy, but it is not an efficient strategy.
To become fluent, it is essential to have the daily ongoing practice that number talks provide. It is important to move students from concrete to representational to abstract thinking. Number talks can move students from concept learning to understanding the relationships between numbers, then on to recalling facts quickly, efficiently, and accurately.
An important aspect of a number talk is that students articulate and share their strategies. Sharing strategies with other students through a number talk provides the means to explain, justify, and make sense of math.
On the next page, you will see the required fluency standards by grade level. Keep these in mind as you use number talks in whole group, small group, or intervention settings. If students are struggling with a number talk, step back to easier numbers or introduce an easier strategy. If the computation is abstract, consider a representational model or if that is too difficult, use a concrete model.
REQUIRED FLUENCY ACCORDING TO COMMON CORE STATE STANDARDS
Kindergarten
K. OA.A.5 Fluently add and subtract within five.
K. OA.A.3 Decompose numbers less than or equal to 10 into pairs in more than one way, e.g., by using objects or drawings, and record each decomposition by a drawing or equation (e.g., 5 = 2 + 3 and 5 = 4 + 1).
K. OA.A.4 For any number from one to nine, find the number that makes 10 when added to the given number, e.g., by using objects or drawings, and record the answer with a drawing or equation.
K. NBT.A. 1 Compose and decompose numbers from 11 to 19 into 10 ones and some further ones, e.g., by using objects or drawings, and record each composition or decomposition by a drawing or equation (such as 18 = 10 + 8); understand that these numbers are composed of 10 ones and 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, or 9 ones.
First Grade
1.OA.B.3 Apply properties of operations as strategies to add and subtract.
1.OA.B.4 Understand subtraction as