Exploring the relationship between division and multiplication through fractional parts.
Learning objectives · 3
Materials Needed
Space Needed
Groups at tables with access to research materials
Exploring the relationship between division and multiplication through fractional parts.
Groups receive a complex, ill-structured problem with no single right answer. They must define the problem, identify what they need to know, research and gather information, develop possible solutions, and present their reasoning. The messy, ambiguous nature of the problem mirrors real-world challenges and develops resilience and analytical thinking.
Learn about this methodologyTime Range
35-60 min
Group Size
12-32
Space Needed
Groups at tables with access to research materials
Bloom’s Level
Analyze, Evaluate, Create
Peak Energy Moment
The 'Health Inspector' Twist. When the teacher suddenly stops the clock and demands 'The Proof,' students realize that their tiny paper slivers actually have a mathematical relationship to the whole paper strip.
The Surprise
The 'Micro-Portion' reveal. Students will be shocked at how tiny 1/15th of a pizza (1/3 ÷ 5) actually looks when they cut their paper strips. The physical tininess of the result makes the math memorable.
What to Expect
Expect lots of 'Whoa, that's tiny!' and 'I can't even cut it that small!' The room will be buzzing with students trying to fold paper strips into 15 equal parts, leading to laughter and collaborative problem-solving.
When your class is in the room
Launch puts you into the Co-Teacher view - live timer, step-by-step facilitation, in-context tips. You can step back to this overview anytime.
You created a mission!
Sign up to save it to your library and create more.