Posted in Christmas, Numicon

Cover the Present – a Digit Dog challenge

Digit Dog and Calculating Cat are trying to find the Numicon shape that fits on their presents.

 

 

 

 

Present Challenge 1

Spread out one set of presents (download here) and one set of Numicon shapes.

Ask: Which shape fits each present?

Which shapes are easy to find? Why?

Which are more difficult? Why?

For more of a challenge:  Put the Numicon shapes in a feely bag. Choose one present, then feel in the bag to see if you can find the shape that fits it.

Ask children to reason about which shape could fit on each present:

What are you thinking?

Which shape do you think it will be?

Which shape can’t it be?

Is it bigger than the red shape? Is it smaller than the purple?

Which shapes are easy / hard to find?

 

Posted in Calculating, Making totals, Numicon

Total 6

An extension of Investigating totals

Put the shapes on the grid but this time each row, column and diagonal has to have the same total.

6 grid

You might want to make the task simpler:

  1. Make each row total 6
  2. Make each column total 6
  3. Make the rows and columns total 6
  4. Include the diagonals.

Which shapes are you using in each row / column? Why?

Is there more than one way of completing the grid?

Look at your partner’s grid. What is the same and what is different?

Make the task more challenging:

  1. Use digit cards instead of the shapes.
  2. Don’t give the total – Can you put the Numicon shapes on the grid so that each row, column and diagonal add to the same total?

What do you think the total might be? Why?

How are you going to start? What are you going to try first?

What if.……..you used three different consecutive shapes?

3 twos, 3 threes and 3 fours                                 3 threes, 3 fours and 3 fives

Screenshot 2018-09-26 14.28.32or   Screenshot 2018-09-26 14.28.43

What will the totals of each row be now?

Screenshot 2018-09-26 15.51.01

Posted in Calculating, Making totals, Numicon

Investigating totals

Digit Dog has got a 3 x 3 grid and 9 Numicon shapes – 3 one shapes, 3 two shapes and 3 three shapes. He is going to put the shapes on the grid and investigate the totals he can make.

Screenshot 2018-09-23 15.50.21

This is what he does first:

Screenshot 2018-09-23 15.50.32

Copy what Digit Dog has done.

Digit Dog says that the sum of the shapes in the first row is 6. Do you agree with Digit Dog? Why or why not? Are you sure?

Expecting learners to explain their thinking helps develop their reasoning skills.

If you agree, convince me that Digit Dog is correct. If you don’t agree, explain why you think he is wrong.

Encourage learners to explain why the total of the first row is 6. Use the Numicon shapes to show that the 3 shapes in the first row are equivalent to a six-shape. Explanations are much easier when you use concrete apparatus.

Screenshot 2018-09-23 18.01.53     Screenshot 2018-09-23 18.01.40

Screenshot 2018-09-23 18.07.13

Use the pan balance to explain.

Calculating Cat says that the total of the shapes in the third column is 6 too. Is she right? How do you know?

What is the same and what is different about Digit Dog’s row and Calculating Cat’s column?

Can you find any other rows or columns that total 6? Are there any that total more than 6? What about less than 6?

Can you find a row or column that totals 1 more than 6? What about 1 less than 6?

What else do you notice?

How are you going to record the totals you have found?

Now arrange the shapes on the grid in any way you want and investigate the totals that you make. What do you notice? What is the largest total you can make? The smallest total?

Look at a grid your friend has done. What is the same? What is different?

What if you used other shapes?