Haven't signed into your Scholastic account before?
Teachers, not yet a subscriber?
Subscribers receive access to the website and print magazine.
You are being redirecting to Scholastic's authentication page...
Announcements & Tutorials
NEW! SuperSTEM Coming Fall 2023
Sharing Google Activities
2 min.
Setting Up Student View
Exploring Your Issue
Using Text to Speech
Join Our Facebook Group!
1 min.
Subscriber Only Resources
Access this article and hundreds more like it with a subscription to DynaMath magazine.
STANDARDS
CCSS: 3.NBT.A.1, MP5, MP6, MP7
TEKS: 3.2C
Article Options
Lesson: Fear by the Numbers
Objective: Students will use number lines to round numbers related to statistics on fear to the nearest ten or hundred.
Lesson Plan
Spark Engagement.
Play the video “All Kinds of Emotions.” Then, before or after reading the article, spark a discussion based on the following questions:
Introduce the math concept and vocabulary.
Work through the "What to Do" box.
Reinforce with math practice.
Have students complete problems 1 through 4 on page 5 of the article.
Encourage students to underline, circle, or highlight the place value they are rounding to. This can help them to determine the two numbers their number will fall between and its midpoint.
—Victoria J. Dixon, San Antonio, TX
Differentiate & Extend
Skills Sheets: Level Down: Rounding to the Nearest Ten Match (3.NBT.A.1) | On Level: DynaDash: Rounding With Number Lines (3.NBT.A.1) | Level Up: Roll and Round (3.NBT.A.1, 4.NBT.A.3)
SEL (Social-emotional learning activity/prompt): Have students reflect on some of their own fears. Ask students to brainstorm some strategies that they could use to lessen some of their fears. For example, talk with someone about what worries them. Have students write or draw about 3 strategies that could help them with overcoming their fears.
DynaMath@Home: Have students collect 5 books from around their home, and then make a list of the total number of pages in each book. Using their list, task students with rounding each number of pages to nearest ten and hundred. For an additional challenge, have students plot each number on a number line.
Download a printable PDF of this lesson plan.
Share an interactive Google Slides version of this lesson with your students.