Pa 4
Pa 4
Devon LeDrew
Subject:
2nd Grade Math: Pocket Towers
How will you review past learning and make connections to previous lessons?
What skills and content are needed to ultimately master this lesson objective?
How is this objective relevant to students, their lives, and/or the real world?
SWBAT recall how to represent the number of pockets they are wearing with single-unit cubes.
SWBAT organize the cubes to represent data on a graph.
SWBAT represent the same data on a sticky note bar graph.
SWBAT interpret the data presented by the bar graphs and answer questions.
SWBAT represent the same data on a line plot.
SWBAT find the sum of units the data represents.
SWBAT explain how representing data in a graph allows for easier comparison of objects.
Key vocabulary:
Materials:
Mode- the most common number in the data set
Smartboard
Outlier- a number far away from the rest of the data
150 Connecting Cubes
Line Plot- a graph that shows data along a number
23 Sticky Notes
Activity page 15 (24 copies)
line
23 Whiteboards
23 Pencils
Smartboard lesson: Pocket Data Line Plot
Opening (state objectives, connect to previous learning, and make relevant to real life)
Recently we have been working with class data such as what activities we like to do on the weekend, where we
were born, etc. Can anybody name another type of class data we represented? Today, we will be doing something
similar to that but our goal is to organize and represent data in different ways. What are some ways we have
represented data? (Tally chart, pictograph, bar graph, sticky notes). Today we will be representing the number of
pockets we are wearing. We have counted our pockets before, but this time we will show how many students are
wearing a certain number of pockets. How well do you think you could represent the data of pockets in our room in
different ways? Hold up 1 finger if you know 1 way to show it, 2 fingers if you know 2 ways to show it, 3 fingers if
you know 3 ways, or 4 fingers if you know 4 or more ways to show how many pockets there are. We all know how
to make tally marks so you should at least have a one. By the end of the lesson, the goal is to know at least 3 ways
to represent data.
Teacher Will:
Instructional Input
Student Will:
Guided Practice
When students are forming their pocket towers, I will walk around to make sure certain students have the
right number.
When students are organizing towers in their table groups, I will walk around to solve any confusion. The
timer will help keep all students on task, especially those that have trouble focusing.
For students who are confused I will ask What is the best way to organize these towers to show me how
many pockets each person has? Right now they are all scrambled, how can you put them in order?
For early finishers I will ask Why is this the best way? What does it show you?
Teacher Will:
Student Will:
Hold up 3 fingers.
To make sure students are paying attention I will cold call and ask Why is this the best way to organize
our pocket towers?
I will do the same with our sticky notes.
For students who have 0 pockets, they write 0 on their sticky note. I will make sure Madison C., Landen,
Jaydon, and Eddie are participating in their groups by asking guiding questions.
We will do pg. 15 together so they understand the data on the graphs. I will cold call on the names above
to keep their focus and make sure they understand the data.
Teacher Will:
Student Will:
Independent Practice
At this point, Haley will probably come back from her SPED class. I will ask her to form a pocket tower
and write an equation for her tower to show me how many pockets she has in all. I will then ask her to
count the cubes on the whiteboard and tell me how many pockets the rest of the class has.
I will also monitor Madison C.s line plot since she has trouble with motor planning. I will also monitor
Landen and Jaydon to keep them focused.
Closing/Student Reflection/Real-life connections:
How will students summarize and state the significance of what they learned?
Why will students be engaged?
How many different ways did we represent the data? So we already knew how to do tally marks, now we have
done a bar graph and a line plot. What other ways do we know how to represent data? We also know how to
make a pictograph. So now you should be a 3 or 4.
The bonus equation will challenge some students.
Why is it important to be able to represent data in so many ways? This will help you in life to be organized and
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help you compare data. What if you were at a party and some people wanted pepperoni pizza, some wanted
cheese, and some wanted sausage. It is too much to remember in your head so these are all different ways to
organize and represent data.