Lesson 14
Los múltiplos de 10 y de 100 más cercanos
Lesson Purpose
The purpose of this lesson is for students to reason about the position of numbers relative to their immediate multiples of 10 and 100, using number lines to do so.
Lesson Narrative
In a previous lesson, students reasoned about the nearest multiple of 100 to a given number. In this lesson, students extend this work to include multiples of 10. The work here prepares students to round numbers to the nearest ten and hundred in upcoming lessons.
Number lines are still a central representation early in the lesson. Later in the lesson, students begin to reason numerically and think about how they could find the nearest multiple of 10 or 100 if a number line is not provided. Students should be encouraged to consider alternative strategies and use what they know about place value, but can still draw a number line if it is needed. In the lesson synthesis, students learn that rounding is a formal way to say which number a given number is closer too, and that number is often a multiple of 10 or 100.
- Engagement
- MLR2
Learning Goals
Teacher Facing
- Identify the closest multiples of 10 and 100 for numbers within 1,000.
- Understand that rounding is a formal way to say which number a given number is closer to, and that number is often a multiple of 10 or 100.
- Understand the meaning of “the closest multiple of 10.”
Student Facing
- Para un número dado, encontremos el múltiplo de 100 que está más cerca y el múltiplo de 10 que está más cerca.
Required Preparation
Lesson Timeline
Warm-up | 10 min |
Activity 1 | 20 min |
Activity 2 | 15 min |
Lesson Synthesis | 10 min |
Cool-down | 5 min |
Teacher Reflection Questions
In this lesson students are encouraged to begin reasoning numerically about finding the nearest multiple of 10 or 100. What evidence did you see of such reasoning?
Suggested Centers
- Target Numbers (1–5), Stage 7: Subtract Hundreds, Tens, or Ones (Addressing)
- How Close? (1–5), Stage 4: Add to 1,000 (Addressing)
- Capture Squares (1–3), Stage 6: Multiply with 1–5 (Supporting)