Lesson 2

Match Shapes

Warm-up: Which One Doesn’t Belong: Buttons (10 minutes)

Narrative

The purpose of this warm-up is to introduce students to the full Which One Doesn’t Belong routine. In this routine, students compare 4 different images and analyze the characteristics or attributes of the images. It gives the teacher an opportunity to hear how students use terminology and talk about characteristics of the items in comparison to one another. In this warm-up, students compare 4 images of buttons. By the end of the section, students will compare 4 images of shapes. Listen to how students create an argument and use or revise their language to make their argument clear to others (MP3, MP6).

Launch

  • Groups of 2
  • Display the image.
  • “Pick one that doesn’t belong. Be ready to share why it doesn’t belong.”
  • 1 minute: quiet think time

Activity

  • “Discuss your thinking with your partner.”
  • 2–3 minutes: partner discussion
  • Share and record responses.

Student Facing

Which one doesn’t belong?

ARound yellow button, 4 holes.

BRound blue button, 2 holes.
CFlower shaped blue button. 4 holes.

 

DBlue round button, 4 holes.

Student Response

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Activity Synthesis

  • Display the button with only two dots.
  • “Why does this button not belong?” (It only has two dots. It does not have four dots like the other buttons.)

Activity 1: Match Objects and Shapes (10 minutes)

Narrative

The purpose of this activity is for students to connect objects in the environment to flat shapes. Students look at an illustration of objects in the environment and match them to the shapes they look like. Students may match each shape with multiple examples in the image. Students discuss how the object and the shape are alike. When students make and describe their own choices for how they represent real-world objects with geometric shapes, they prepare to model real-world problems with mathematics (MP4).

Launch

  • Groups of 2
  • “Draw a line to match each shape to the object that it looks like. Tell your partner how the shape and the object are alike, or the same.”

Activity

  • 5 minutes: partner work time

Student Facing

Draw a line to match each shape to the object that it looks like.

Circle.

Track surrounding a soccer field. Triangles, circles, rectangles.

Student Response

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Activity Synthesis

  • Invite students to share which objects they matched each shape to.

Activity 2: Which Shape is the Same? (10 minutes)

Narrative

The purpose of this activity is for students to identify shapes that are the same regardless of their size or orientation. While students may name the shapes in the activity, students do not need to identify the shapes in order to match the shapes that are the same. When students observe that a shape is the same even though the size, color, and orientation may differ, they identify a common mathematical property of the shapes (MP7).

MLR7 Compare and Connect. Synthesis: To amplify student language and illustrate connections, follow along and point to the relevant part of the displays as students compare the shapes and their rationale for selecting the shape.
Advances: Representing, Conversing
Action and Expression: Develop Expression and Communication. Students may need support identifying which rotated shape is the same. Give students access to shapes that they can rotate to match up with the first shape in each row.
Supports accessibility for: Visual-Spatial Processing

Launch

  • Groups of 2
  • Draw
    Rectangle.
    and
    Rectangle.
  • “What do you notice about these shapes?” (They are the same shape but 1 is standing up and one is laying down.)
  • 30 seconds: quiet think time
  • 1 minute partner discussion.
  • Share responses.
  • “How do you know that they are the same shape?” (They have the same sides and corners. I can imagine flipping the second one up and it would be the same as the first one.)
  • “Now you are going to look for more shapes that are the same. Color the shape that is the same as the first shape in each row. Tell your partner how you know they are the same.”

Activity

  • 5 minutes: partner work time

Student Facing

Color the shape that is the same as the first shape in each row.
  1.  
    Blue rectangle.
    3 sided shape.
    Rectangle.
  2.  
    Blue triangle.
    Triangle.
    Square.
  3.  
    Blue rectangle.
    Rectangle.
    Circle.

  4.  
    Blue circle.
    Oval.
    Round Shape.
  5.  
    Blue square.
    Rectangle.
    Square.
  6.  
    Blue triangle.
    Triangle.
    Square, turned so the flat side is not on the bottom.

Student Response

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Activity Synthesis

  • Display the problem with a square.
  • “Which shape is the same? How do you know they are the same?” (The second one because it isn’t stretched out like the first shape. The second one because they are both squares, one is just smaller.)

Activity 3: Centers: Choice Time (25 minutes)

Narrative

The purpose of this activity is for students to choose from activities that offer practice with number and shape concepts.

Students choose from any stage of previously introduced centers.

  • Picture Books
  • Bingo
  • Shake and Spill

Required Materials

Materials to Gather

Required Preparation

  • Gather materials from: 
    • Picture Books, Stages 1-3
    • Bingo, Stages 1 and 2
    • Shake and Spill, Stages 1 and 2

Launch

  • “Today we are going to choose from centers we have already learned.”
  • Display the center choices in the student book.
  • “Think about what you would like to do first.”
  • 30 seconds: quiet think time

Activity

  • Invite students to work at the center of their choice.
  • 10 minutes: center work time
  • “Choose what you would like to do next.”
  • 10 minutes: center work time

Student Facing

Choose a center.

Picture Books

Center. Picture books.

Bingo

Center. Bingo.

Shake and Spill

Center activity, shake and spill.

Activity Synthesis

  • “Which center did you enjoy most today? What did you enjoy about this center?”

Lesson Synthesis

Lesson Synthesis

“Today we learned that objects in the world look like shapes we can describe. We also learned that the same shape can look different if it is turned a different way or if it is a different size.”

“Tell your partner about two things in the classroom that look like the same shape.” (The clock and the sticker look like the same shape. The book and the door look like the same shape.)

Cool-down: Unit 3, Section A Checkpoint (0 minutes)

Cool-Down

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