Lesson 6
Use More, Fewer, or the Same Number to Describe Groups
Lesson Purpose
The purpose of this lesson is for students to use comparison language to describe the number of objects in groups.
Lesson Narrative
In previous lessons, students identified and made groups with more, fewer, or the same number of objects as another group. They heard and made sense of comparison statements such as “There are more orange squares than green triangles.” In this lesson, students repeat and produce comparison language to describe the number of objects in groups.
- Action and Expression
- MLR8
Learning Goals
Teacher Facing
- Compare groups of up to 10 objects.
- Use “more”, “fewer", and “the same number” to describe comparisons.
Student Facing
- Let’s use “more”, “fewer”, and “the same number” to describe groups.
Required Materials
Materials to Gather
Required Preparation
Activity 1:
- Each group needs three bags of 10 or fewer cubes:
- Bag 1: fewer red cubes than blue cubes
- Bag 2: more red cubes than blue cubes
- Bag 3: the same number of red and blue cubes
Activity 3:
- Gather materials from:
- Less, Same, More, Stages 1
- Number Race, Stage 1
- Shake and Spill, Stages 1 and 2
- Math Fingers, Stages 1 and 2
- Pattern Blocks, Stages 1-3
- Picture Books, Stages 1 and 2
Lesson Timeline
Warm-up | 10 min |
Activity 1 | 10 min |
Activity 2 | 15 min |
Activity 3 | 20 min |
Lesson Synthesis | 5 min |
Cool-down | 0 min |
Teacher Reflection Questions
Students shared their thinking multiple times in this lesson. What have you noticed about the language students use? What support can you offer to students who struggle to communicate their ideas orally?