2022
Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics K-5 Math

1st Grade - Gateway 2

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Gateway Ratings Summary

Rigor & Mathematical Practices

Rigor & the Mathematical Practices
Gateway 2 - Meets Expectations
100%
Criterion 2.1: Rigor and Balance
8 / 8
Criterion 2.2: Math Practices
10 / 10

The materials reviewed for Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics Grade 1 meet expectations for rigor and balance and practice-content connections. The materials help students develop procedural skills, fluency, and application. The materials also make meaningful connections between the Standards for Mathematical Content and the Standards for Mathematical Practice (MPs).

Criterion 2.1: Rigor and Balance

8 / 8

Materials reflect the balances in the Standards and help students meet the Standards’ rigorous expectations, by giving appropriate attention to: developing students’ conceptual understanding; procedural skill and fluency; and engaging applications.

The materials reviewed for Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics Grade 1 meet expectations for rigor. The materials develop conceptual understanding of key mathematical concepts, give attention throughout the year to procedural skill and fluency, and spend sufficient time working with engaging applications of mathematics. There is a balance of the three aspects of rigor within the grade.

Indicator 2a

2 / 2

Materials develop conceptual understanding of key mathematical concepts, especially where called for in specific content standards or cluster headings.

The materials reviewed for Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics Grade 1 meet expectations for developing conceptual understanding of key mathematical concepts, especially where called for in specific content standards or cluster headings.

Materials develop conceptual understanding throughout the grade level. According to IM Curriculum, Design Principles, Purposeful Representations, “Across lessons and units, students are systematically introduced to representations and encouraged to use representations that make sense to them. As their learning progresses, students are given opportunities to make connections between different representations and the concepts and procedures they represent.” Each lesson begins with a Warm-up, designed to highlight key learning aligned to the objective and to support the development of conceptual understanding through student discourse and reflection. Examples include: 

  • Unit 2, Addition and Subtraction Story Problems, Lesson 7, Warm-up, students develop conceptual understanding as they use grouping strategies to represent numbers. An image of red and yellow counters are shown. “How many do you see? How do you see them? If needed, “What equation represents this image?” (1.OA.6)

  • Unit 5, Adding Within 100, Lesson 6, Activity 1, students develop conceptual understanding as they determine the unknown addend in equations with sums that are multiples of 10. Students are given access to connection cubes in towers of 10. “Display the first image in the student workbook. (Image is a picture of 4 ten frames filled in with 10 red chips and 1 ten frame with 5 chips) What number makes this equation true? How do you know? (5. I see 4 tens 5 ones and 5 more would fill up the 10-frame.)” (1.NBT.4)

  • Unit 6, Length Measurements Within 120 Units, Lesson 12, Warm-up, students develop conceptual understanding by discussing “the idea that addition and subtraction are related operations. Use these equations to explain how addition can help with subtraction.” (If you know an addition fact like 6+8=14, then you also know two subtraction facts, 14-8=6 and 14-6=8.) (1.OA.6)

Materials provide opportunities for students to independently demonstrate conceptual understanding throughout the grade level. Design Principles, Coherent Progress, “Each activity starts with a launch that gives all students access to the task. This is followed by independent work time that allows them to grapple with problems individually before working in small groups. The activity ends with a synthesis to ensure students have an opportunity to consolidate their learning by making connections between their work and the mathematical goals.” The Cool-down part of the lesson includes independent work.  Curriculum Guide, How Do You Use the Materials, A Typical Lesson, Four Phases of a Lesson, Cool-down, “the cool-down task is to be given to students at the end of a lesson.  Students are meant to work on the cool-down for about 5 minutes independently and turn it in.” Independent work could include practice problems, problem sets, and time to work alone within groups. Examples include:

  • Unit 3, Adding and Subtracting Within 20, Lesson 2, Cool-down, students demonstrate how counting relates to addition. “How does knowing 7+2=9 help you with 2+7=___? Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.” (1.OA.3) 

  • Unit 4, Numbers to 99, Lesson 15, Section C Practice Problems, Problem 2, students demonstrate conceptual understanding as they compare two-digit numbers based on the meaning of the tens and ones. “Decide if each statement is true or false. Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words. a.$$35<29$$ b.$$72=27$$ c. 81>77.” (1.NBT.3)

  • Unit 5, Adding Within 100, Lesson 14, Activity 1, students demonstrate conceptual understanding as they apply their understanding of place value and properties of operations to solve two-digit addition problems. A table is shown with students' names and the number of cans they collected. Students work independently for six minutes and then check in with their partner to answer the following questions. “The table shows the number of cans four students collected for their class’s food drive. Partner A: Write an equation to represent your thinking. How many cans did Lin and Priya collect altogether? How many cans did Han and Tyler collect altogether? How many cans did all four students collect altogether? Partner B: Write an equation to represent your thinking. How many cans did Tyler and Priya collect altogether? How many cans did Lin and Han collect altogether? How many cans did all four students collect altogether?”  (1.NBT.4)

Indicator 2b

2 / 2

Materials give attention throughout the year to individual standards that set an expectation for procedural skill and fluency.

The materials reviewed for Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics Grade 1 meet expectations for giving attention throughout the year to individual standards that set an expectation of procedural skill and fluency.

Materials develop procedural skills and fluency throughout the grade level. According to IM Curriculum, Design Principles, Balancing Rigor, “Warm-ups, practice problems, centers, and other built-in routines help students develop procedural fluency, which develops over time.” Examples include: 

  • Unit 1, Adding, Subtracting, and Working with Data, Lesson 5, Activity 1, students subtract within 10 using different strategies. Launch, “Give each group a set of number cards, two recording sheets, and access to two-color counters and 10-frames. ‘We are going to learn a new way to play Check it Off. This time, instead of adding to find each number on the recording sheet, you will subtract.’ Demonstrate choosing two number cards. ‘Now I find the difference between the two numbers. The difference is the result when one number is subtracted from another. What is the difference between these two numbers? How do you know?’ Demonstrate checking off the number on the recording sheet. ‘After you check off the number, write a subtraction expression to show the difference.’ Demonstrate writing the subtraction expression. ‘Continue taking turns with your partner. The person who checks off the most numbers wins.’” (1.OA.5 and 1.OA.6).

  • Unit 5, Adding Within 100, Lesson 6, Warm-up, Student Task Statements, students use different strategies to add within 20. “Find the value of each expression mentally. 8+2, 8+5, 9+8, 7+6.” (1.OA.6).

  • Unit 8, Putting it All Together, Lesson 1, Warm-up, students have an opportunity to strengthen their number sense and procedural fluency. Activity, “How many do you see? How do you see them?” An image of a  10-frame is shown with 5 red dots and 4 yellow dots. Teaching Notes, Student Response, “9: I see 1 empty space and 1 less than 10 is 9.” (1.OA.6)

The instructional materials provide opportunities for students to independently demonstrate procedural skills and fluency throughout the grade level. Activities can be completed during a lesson. Cool-downs or end of lesson checks for understanding are designed for independent completion. Examples include:

  • Unit 2, Addition and Subtraction Story Problems, Lesson 5, Activity 2, Narrative, “Partner A asks their partner for a number that would make 10 when added to the number on one of their cards. If Partner B has the card, they give it to Partner A. If not, Partner A chooses a new card. When students make the target number 10, they put down those two cards and write an equation to represent the combination. Students continue playing until one player runs out of cards. The player with the most pairs wins.” (1.OA.6)

  • Unit 3, Adding and Subtracting Within 20, Lesson 4, Activity 2, students justify that they have found all the ways to make 10. Teaching Notes, “You will have some time to work on this problem on your own, and then share your thinking with a partner. 5 minutes: independent work time” Student Task Statements, “1. Show all the ways to make 10.” An image of a ten frame with 5 red dots and 5 yellow dots is displayed.  “2. How do you know you have found all the ways? Be ready to explain your thinking in a way that others will understand.”  (1.OA.3, 1.OA.6)

  • Unit 8, Putting It All Together, Lesson 2, Cool-down, students use related facts for addition to solve and addition equation. Student Task Statements, “Mai is still working on 9-6=___. Write an addition equation she can use to help figure out the difference. Addition equation: ____.” (1.OA.6)

Indicator 2c

2 / 2

Materials are designed so that teachers and students spend sufficient time working with engaging applications of the mathematics.

The materials reviewed for Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics Grade 1 meet expectations for being designed so that teachers and students spend sufficient time working with engaging applications of the mathematics.

Students have the opportunity to engage with applications of math both with support from the teacher, and independently. According to the K-5 Curriculum Guide, a typical lesson has four phases including Warm-up and one or more instructional Activities which include engaging single and multi-step application problems. Lesson Synthesis and Cool-downs provide opportunities for students to demonstrate multiple routine and non-routine applications of the mathematics throughout the grade level. Cool-downs or end of lesson checks for understanding are designed for independent completion.

Examples of routine applications include:

  • Unit 3, Adding and Subtracting Within 20, Lesson 15, Activity 2, students solve real-world story problems with 3 addends (1.OA.2, 1.OA.3, 1.OA.5, 1.OA.6). Activity, “10 minutes: independent work time.” Student Task Statements, Problem 1, “Noah collected 3 bird picture cards. Clare collected 4 cards. Jada collected 7 cards. How many cards did they collect altogether? Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words. Equation:___.”

  • Unit 4, Numbers to 99, Lesson 4, Activity 1, students solve addition and subtraction problems (1.NBT.4, 1.NBT.6). Activity, “Read the task statement. 7 minutes: independent work time.” Problem 2, Student Task Statements, “Tyler is counting a collection of cubes. In Bag C there are 7 towers of 10. He takes 40 cubes out of the bag. How many cubes does he have left in the bag? Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.”

  • Unit 8, Putting It All Together, Lesson 6, Activity 1, students add and subtract within 20 to solve Compare, Difference Unknown story problems, (1.OA.1, 1.OA.6). Student Task Statements, Problem 2, “The cotton candy booth sold 17 bags of blue cotton candy. They sold 7 bags of pink cotton candy. How many more bags of blue candy did they sell than pink candy?”

Examples of non-routine applications include:

  • Unit 2, Addition and Subtraction Story Problems, Lesson 17, Activity 1, students compare and contrast two different story problems (1.OA.1) Student Task Statements, “1. Compare these stories about playing 4 corners. There are 6 students playing 4 corners. Some more students come to play. Now there are 9 students playing 4 corners. How many students came to play? 9 students are playing 4 corners. 7 students are waiting in a corner. The other students are still deciding which corner to pick. How many students are still deciding which corner to pick? How are these problems alike? How are they different?” Activity: “Talk to your partner about how the two problems are the same and different.” 4 minutes: partner discussion. Share responses.”

  • Unit 5, Adding Within 100, Lesson 7, Activity 1, students use place value reasoning and properties of operations to determine whether they would compose a ten when adding a two-digit and a one-digit number in a real-world problem (1.NBT.4). Student Task Statements, “Jada likes to look for ways to make a new ten when she adds. Would she be able to a make a new ten when she adds to find the value of these sums? If Jada could make a new ten, circle ‘Yes.’ If Jada could not make a new ten, circle ‘No.’ Does the expression make a new ten? 45+5 Yes, No, Explain how you know. Find the value. Write equations to show how you found the value of the sum.”

  • Unit 8, Putting it All Together, Lesson 5, Activity 1, Problem 1, students use addition and subtraction to solve real-world problems (1.OA.1, 1.OA.6). Activity, “8 minutes: independent work time.” Student Task Statements, “Solve each problem. Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words. There are 7 first graders and some second graders at the planetarium. There are 18 students at the planetarium. How many second graders are at the planetarium?”

Indicator 2d

2 / 2

The three aspects of rigor are not always treated together and are not always treated separately. There is a balance of the three aspects of rigor within the grade.

The materials reviewed for Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics Grade 1 meet expectations in that the three aspects of rigor are not always treated together and are not always treated separately. There is a balance of the three aspects of rigor within the grade. 

In the K-5 Curriculum Guide, Why is the curriculum designed this way?, Design Principles, Balancing Rigor, “opportunities to connect new representations and language to prior learning support students in building conceptual understanding. Access to new mathematics and problems prompts students to apply their conceptual understanding and procedural fluency to novel situations. Warm-ups, practice problems, centers, and other built-in routines help students develop procedural fluency, which develops over time.”

All three aspects of rigor are present independently throughout Grade 1. Examples where instructional materials attend to conceptual understanding, procedural skill and fluency, or application include:

  • Unit 3, Adding and Subtracting Within 20, Lesson 4, Activity 1, students apply properties of operations as strategies to add and subtract. Launch, “Give each group a cup, 10 two-color counters, and two recording sheets.” Activity, “Today you will play Shake and Spill with 10 counters. When you write the equation to represent your counters, make sure it shows how many red counters and how many yellow counters you got.” Activity Synthesis, “Display six red counters and four yellow counters. Here are the counters from a round of Shake and Spill. There are six red counters and four yellow counters. What equations can I write to represent the counters? Why do both equations represent the counters? (You can start with the red or start with the yellow and there are still 10 total counters.” (1.OA.3)

  • Unit 4, Numbers to 99, Lesson 4, Cool-down, students develop procedural fluency as they subtract and add multiples of 10 in the range of 10-90. Student Task Statements, “Find the value of the expressions. 1. 50+20, 2. 70-50, 3. 60-30.”(1.NBT.6)

  • Unit 5, Adding Within 100, Section C Practice Problems, Lesson 12, students extend their conceptual understanding as they use place value understanding and properties of operations to add and subtract. Problem 4, “Choose a two-digit number to add to 46 so that you make a new 10. Add the numbers. Write equations to show your thinking.” (1.NBT.4)

Multiple aspects of rigor are engaged simultaneously to develop students’ mathematical understanding of a single unit of study throughout the materials. Examples include:

  • Unit 1, Adding, Subtracting, and Working with Data, Lesson 8, Activity 1, students develop conceptual understanding alongside application as they sort shapes into categories and interpret the data. Launch, “Give each group a set of shape cards and access to copies of the three-column table. Look at all of your shape cards. Take a minute to look over the cards by yourself first and think about how you would sort them.” Activity, “Work with your partner to sort the cards into three categories in any way that you want. You do not need to use all of the cards. Share with another group. Explain how you sorted the shapes. Tell how many shapes are in each category and how many shapes there are altogether. (There are 5 white shapes. There are 12 shapes altogether.)” (1.MD.4)

  • Unit 2, Addition and Subtraction Story Problems, Lesson 1, Activity 1, students develop conceptual understanding alongside application as they add and subtract within 20 to solve word problems. Launch, “Give students access to 10-frames and connecting cubes or two-color counters. Display the image from the warm-up. ‘This is a picture of a library. Talk to your partner about what you know and what you wonder about libraries.’ 3 minutes: partner discussion. Share and record what students know and wonder about libraries. ‘We are going to solve a lot of story problems about libraries.’ Display and read the numberless story. 30 seconds: quiet think time. 1 minute: partner discussion. Share responses. If not already mentioned, ask, ‘Are there more or fewer kids at the library after some go home?’” Activity, “Ask students to open their books. Read the problem with numbers. 2 minutes: independent work time. ‘Share your thinking with your partner.’ 2 minutes: partner discussion. Monitor students who solve or represent the problem in the following ways: objects, drawings, count back, an expression (9-2).” Student Task Statements, “1. Some kids were at the library. Then some of the kids went home. What do you notice? What do you wonder? 2. There were 9 kids at the library. Then 2 of the kids went home. How many kids are at the library now? Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.” An image of a male student in a library is shown. (1.OA.1) 

  • Unit 5, Adding Within 100, Lesson 2, Activity 1, students use conceptual understanding alongside procedural skill and fluency as they add 2 two-digit numbers within 100 composing a ten in a way that makes sense to them. Launch, “Groups of 2. Give students access to connecting cubes in towers of 10 and singles.” Activity, “Read the task statement. 5 minutes: independent work time. 2 minutes: partner discussion. Monitor for students who use the methods described in the Activity Narrative.” Student Task Statements, “Find the value of 23+45. Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words. An image of two female students working together is shown.” (1.NBT.4)

Criterion 2.2: Math Practices

10 / 10

Materials meaningfully connect the Standards for Mathematical Content and Standards for Mathematical Practice (MPs).

The materials reviewed for Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics Grade 1 meet expectations for practice-content connections. The materials meaningfully connect the Standards for Mathematical Content and the Standards for Mathematical Practice (MPs).

Indicator 2e

2 / 2

Materials support the intentional development of MP1: Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them; and MP2: Reason abstractly and quantitatively, for students, in connection to the grade-level content standards, as expected by the mathematical practice standards.

The materials reviewed for Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics Grade 1 meet expectations for supporting the intentional development of MP1: Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them; and MP2: Reason abstractly and quantitatively, for students, in connection to the grade-level content standards, as expected by the mathematical practice standards. Students have opportunities to engage with the Math Practices across the year, and they are often explicitly identified for teachers in several places including the Instructional Routines (Warm-up Routines and Other Instructional Routines), Activity Narratives, and About this lesson.

MP1 is identified and connected to grade-level content, and there is intentional development of MP1 to meet its full intent. Students make sense of problems and persevere in solving them as they work with support of the teacher and independently throughout the units. Examples include:

  • Unit 2, Addition and Subtraction Story Problems, Lesson 1, Activity 2, students solve addition and subtraction story problems in ways that make sense to them. Synthesis, “How are these problems the same? How are they different?” (They have the same numbers, but different answers. Problem 1 is addition, problem 4 is subtraction.)” Activity Narrative, “The purpose of this activity is for students to solve Add To and Take From, Result Unknown problems in a way that makes sense to them (MP1).” Student Task Statements, Problem 1, “5 books were on a shelf. Clare put 2 more books on the shelf. How many books are on the shelf now? Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.”

  • Unit 3, Adding and Subtracting Within 20, Lesson 11, Activity 1, students represent and solve problems in ways that make sense to them. Activity, “‘Read the task statement.’ 3 minutes: independent work time. ‘Share your thinking with your partner.’ 2 minutes: partner work time. Monitor for students who represent their thinking using 10-frames to show 14 and then add 3 more.” Student Task Statements, “Kiran collects rocks. So far he has 14 rocks. He goes on a hike and collects 3 more rocks. How many rocks does Kiran have? Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words. Equation _____.” Activity Narrative, “Students represent and solve the problem in a way that makes sense to them (MP1).”

  • Unit 6, Length Measurements Within 120 Units, Lesson 17, Activity 2, students "solve addition and subtraction word problems by acting out the stories.” Launch, “Take turns reading a problem you came up with in the previous activity. Your partner group will act out the story with connecting cubes, then solve the problems. Then switch roles.” Activity Narrative, “Acting out gives students opportunities to make sense of a context (MP1).” Student Task Statements, “Group A: Read your problems to your partner group. Group B: Act out and solve the problems. Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words. Write an equation to represent each story problem. What do you notice about the story problems and the equations you wrote? Switch roles.”

MP2 is identified and connected to grade level content, and there is intentional development of MP2 to meet its full intent. Students reason abstractly and quantitatively as they work with support of the teacher and independently throughout the units. Examples include:

  • Unit 1, Adding, Subtracting, and Working with Data, Lesson 2, Activity 1, students “relate dot images to addition expressions”. In the Student Task Statements, students are given 5 pairs of dots and a table with 5 expressions: “Match each pair of dots to an expression. Then, find the total.” Activity Narrative, “When students match dot images and expressions and write expressions to match dot images, they reason abstractly and quantitatively (MP2).”

  • Unit 6, Length Measurements Within 120, Lesson 11, Activity 1, students find sums and differences using measurement. Activity, “‘Solve the problems using your measurements.’ 3 minutes: independent work time. 2 minutes: partner discussion. Monitor for a student who represents the third problem with: two towers of cubes, one to represent the length of their shoe and one to represent the length of the teacher’s shoe. a drawing that directly compares shoe lengths. an addition equation. a subtraction equation.” Student Task Statements, “Solve these problems about the length of your group’s shoes. Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, words, or equations. What is the length of your shoe and your partner’s shoe together? Whose shoe is longer, yours or your partner’s? How much longer? Whose shoe is shorter, your teacher’s shoe or your shoe? How much shorter?” Activity Narrative, “When students find sums and distances using their measurements they reason abstractly and quantitatively (MP2).”

  • Unit 7, Geometry and Time, Lesson 16, Activity 3, students relate time (quantitative) to a schedule (abstract). Activity, “‘Fill in the blanks for your ideal Sunday schedule. Then share with your partner.’ 4 minutes: independent work time. 2 minutes: partner discussion. Monitor for a student who has an activity at 12:30.” Student Task Statements, “Fill in the blanks to show your ideal Sunday schedule. (Words listed: Time, Activity, Clock; image of a blank digital clock; a blank analog clock with numbers listed for hours and tick marks for minutes)” Activity Narrative, “The task gives an opportunity for students to relate time and telling time to their Sunday schedule (MP2).”

Indicator 2f

2 / 2

Materials support the intentional development of MP3: Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others, for students, in connection to the grade-level content standards, as expected by the mathematical practice standards.

The materials reviewed for Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics Grade 1 meet expectations for supporting the intentional development of MP3: Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others, for students, in connection to the grade-level content standards, as expected by the mathematical practice standards. 

Students have opportunities to meet the full intent of MP3 over the course of the year.  The Mathematical Practices are explicitly identified for teachers in several places in the materials including Instructional routines, Activity Narratives, and the About this Lesson section. Students engage with MP3 in connection to grade level content as they work with support of the teacher and independently throughout the units. 

Examples of constructing viable arguments include:

  • Unit 2, Addition and Subtraction Story Problems, Lesson 11, Activity 2, students construct viable arguments as they solve Compare, Difference Unknown story problems in the context of connecting cube towers and answer the question "how do you know?” Launch, “Groups of 2. Give each group four towers of ten connecting cubes. Display one red tower of eight connecting cubes, one yellow tower of three connecting cubes, and the handful of yellow connecting cubes. ‘I have two towers and I need to make them the same number of cubes. But I only have these yellow cubes. How can I make them the same?’ 1 minute: quiet think time. 1 minute: partner discussion. ‘Share and record responses.’” Problem 4, Student Task Statements, “Lin is making 2 cube towers. The yellow tower has 7 cubes. The red tower has 3 cubes. She only has red cubes. How can she make the towers have the same number of cubes? Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words. If you have time: Write your own problem about 2 cube towers. Trade problems with a partner and solve.” Activity Narrative, “When students answer the question, How do you know? they are beginning to explain their reasoning and construct viable arguments (MP3).” 

  • Unit 6, Length Measurements Within 120 Units, Lesson 7, Cool-down, students construct viable arguments as they measure lengths of objects using different length units. Student Task Statements, “Priya says that the length of the shoe is 5 paper clips. Is her measurement accurate? Why or why not?”

  • Unit 8, Putting It All Together, Lesson 8, Activity 2, students “interpret representations of numbers up to 100. As students look through each others' work, they discuss how the representations are the same and different and can defend different points of view (MP3).” Synthesis, “How are the representations of your number the same as your classmates? How are they different? If you’d like, you can add to or revise the representations on your page.”

Examples of critiquing the reasoning of others include:

  • Unit 1, Adding, Subtracting, and Working with Data, Lesson 9, Activity 3, students critique the reasoning of others as they interpret representations of class data. Narrative, “Students discuss how the representations they see are the same or different (MP3). ‘With your partner, find a group that represented the data in a different way from how you represented it. One person from each group switch papers with someone from the other group. With your partner, talk about what you notice is the same about each representation and what you notice is different.’ 3 minutes: partner discussion. ‘Share your thinking with the other group. What do you agree about?’ (We agree that each representation shows the same number of votes in each category and the same total number of votes.) 3 minutes: small group discussion.”

  • Unit 4, Numbers to 99, Lesson 7, Activity 2, students critique the reasoning of others as they think about the value of tens and ones and consider a representation where the tens are not presented to the left of the ones. Launch, “Groups of 2. Give students access to connecting cubes in towers of 10 and singles.” Student Task Statements, “Clare says that this shows 68 (sixty-eight). Diego says that this shows 86 (eighty-six). Base ten diagram. 6 ones. 8 tens. Who do you agree with? How do you know they are correct? I agree with ____because.” Activity Narrative, “When students decide who they agree with and explain their reasoning, they critique the reasoning of others (MP3).” 

  • Unit 7, Geometry and Time, Lesson 11, Activity 2, students construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others as they generalize that partitioning the same-size shape into fourths creates smaller pieces than partitioning it into halves. Activity, “‘Read the task statement.’ 5 minutes: partner work time. Monitor for a student who shows and can explain that a half is bigger than a fourth. ‘This activity continues on the next card.’” Student Task Statements, “Priya and Han are sharing roti. Priya says, ‘I want half of the roti because halves are bigger than fourths.’ Han says, ‘I want a fourth of the roti because fourths are bigger than halves because 4 is bigger than 2.’ ‘Who do you agree with?’” Activity Narrative, “When students decide whether they agree with Priya's or Han's statement and justify their choice with diagrams and words, they construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others (MP3).”

Indicator 2g

2 / 2

Materials support the intentional development of MP4: Model with mathematics; and MP5: Use appropriate tools strategically, for students, in connection to the grade-level content standards, as expected by the mathematical practice standards.

The materials reviewed for Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics Grade 1 meet expectations for supporting the intentional development of MP4: Model with mathematics; and MP5: Use appropriate tools strategically, for students, in connection to the grade-level content standards, as expected by the mathematical practice standards. Students have opportunities to engage with the Math Practices across the year and they are often explicitly identified for teachers in several places including the Instructional Routines (Warm-up Routines and Other Instructional Routines), Activity Narratives, and About this Lesson.

MP4 is identified and connected to grade-level content, and there is intentional development of MP4 to meet its full intent. Students use mathematical modeling with support of the teacher and independently throughout the units. Examples include:

  • Unit 2, Addition and Subtraction Story Problems, Lesson 18, Cool-down, students choose equations that match the given story problem. (MP4). Student Task Statements, “Lin has 5 bingo chips on her board. She also has some chips on the table. All together she has 9 bingo chips. How many bingo chips does Lin have on the table? Circle 2 equations that match the story problem. 9 - 5 = ___  , 5 + = 9, 5 - 9 = ___  , 5 + 9 = ___  ." The Activity 2 Narrative states, “When students interpret different equations in terms of a story problem, they model with mathematics (MP4).”

  • Unit 5, Adding Within 100, Lesson 8, Activity 3, students model with mathematics when they experience different contexts in which someone adds a two-digit and a one-digit number. Student Task Statements, “1. Priya watched a football game. The home team scored 35 points in the first half. In the second half they scored 6 more points. How many points did they score all together? Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words. 2. At the football game, 9 fans cheered for the visiting team. There were 45 fans who cheered for the home team. How many fans were at the game all together? Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.” Activity Narrative, “When students create representations and expressions for the context, they develop ways to model the mathematics of a situation and strategies for making sense of and persevering to solve problems (MP1, MP4).”

  • Unit 6, Length Measurements Within 120 Units, Lesson 2, Activity 2, Lesson Narrative, students “compare the length of a side of their desk to the length of one of the legs of their desk indirectly using a string. This lesson helps students use a familiar object in their classroom and encourages them to mathematize their environment (MP4).” Student Task Statements, students are presented with a drawing of a desk. “Compare the length of the side of your desk and the length of one of the legs of your desk using the string. Use a drawing or words to explain how you know which is longer.”

MP5 is identified and connected to grade-level content, and there is intentional development of MP5 to meet its full intent. Students choose appropriate tools strategically with support of the teacher and independently throughout the units. Examples include:

  • Unit 3, Adding and Subtracting Within 20, Lesson 20, Cool-down, students choose a strategy that helps them solve an addition story problem. Student Task Statements, “Jada visited the primate exhibit. She saw 8 monkeys, 4 gorillas, and 7 orangutans. How many primates did she see? Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.” Activity Narrative, “They think strategically and may either choose to use a double 10-frame or decompose and compose the numbers in a way that helps them see the sum as 10 and some ones (MP1, MP5).”

  • Unit 4, Numbers to 99, Lesson 6, Activity 1, students use appropriate tools as they organize, count, and represent a collection of 52 objects. Student Task Statements, “You and your partner will get a bag of objects. Figure out how many are in the bag. Work with your partner to count the collection. Each partner will show on paper how many there are and show how you counted them.” Activity Narrative, “Other students may apply what they learned in previous lessons and create groups of ten using double-ten frames or other tools (MP5).”

  • Unit 5, Adding Within 100, Lesson 9, Activity 1, students “find the sum of 2 two-digit numbers in a way that makes sense to them.” Narrative, “Students may represent these methods in different ways, including using connecting cubes in towers of 10 and singles. Monitor for students who use connecting cubes or base-ten drawings to show making a new unit of ten as part of their method (MP5).” Student Task Statements, “Find the value of 17+36. Show your thinking using drawings, numbers, or words.” Synthesis, “Invite previously identified students to share in the order in the Activity Narrative. As each student shares, record their thinking with drawings and numbers. After each student shares, ask: “How did _____ find the value of 17+36? Does anyone have any questions for _____?”

Indicator 2h

2 / 2

Materials attend to the intentional development of MP6: Attend to precision; and attend to the specialized language of mathematics for students, in connection to the grade-level content standards, as expected by the mathematical practice standards.

The materials reviewed for Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics Grade 1 meet expectations for supporting the intentional development of MP6: Attend to precision; and attend to the specialized language of mathematics, for students, in connection to the grade-level content standards, as expected by the mathematical practice standards. 

Students have many opportunities to attend to precision and to attend to the specialized language of mathematics in connection to grade-level work. This occurs with the support of the teacher as well as independent work throughout the materials. Examples include:

  • Unit 1, Adding, Subtracting, and Working with Data, Lesson 7, Activity 1, students use the specialized language of mathematics to “sort math tools, name the groups they used to sort, and tell the number of objects in each group.” Activity Narrative, “When students share how they sorted with their partner, they use their own mathematical vocabulary and listen to and understand their partner's thinking (MP3, MP6).” Activity Narrative “Explain to another group how you sorted your tools. Make sure to tell them the groups you used and how many objects are in each group.” Synthesis, “‘Are there any words or phrases that are important to include on our display?’ Use this discussion to update the display, by adding (or removing) language, diagrams, or annotations. Remind students to borrow language from the display as needed in the next activity. The label that tells how objects in a group are alike is called a category. ‘One category I saw today was shapes with straight sides. Another category I saw was shapes that have four sides. We will continue to sort into categories’.”

  • Unit 5, Adding Within 100, Lesson 2, Warm-up, Activity Narrative, “When students describe repeated patterns they see using the language of place value, they look for and make use of the base-ten structure of numbers and connect it to the counting sequence (MP6, MP7, MP8).” Launch, “‘Count backwards by 1, starting at 70.’ Record as students count. ‘Stop counting and recording at 20.’” Synthesis, “Who can restate the pattern in different words?”

  • Unit 6, Length Measurements within 120 units, Lesson 1, Activity 1, students use precision when they compare the length of two objects. Activity Narrative, “Students discuss why it is important to line objects up at their endpoints when comparing their length and they make comparisons using precise language (MP3, MP6).” Student Task Statements, “Share your thinking with your partner. Choose 2 objects and compare their lengths. Choose 2 different objects and compare their lengths. Write down your answers. 1. Choose an object that you could write with and find the tower of 3 connecting cubes. Which is longer? Draw the 2 objects to show which is longer. 2. Choose a different object and find the tower of 8 connecting cubes. Which is shorter? Draw the 2 objects to show which is shorter. 3. Find an object from the collection that is shorter than your foot. Fill in the blank. The ___ is shorter than my foot. 4. Find an object from the collection that is longer than your pointer finger. Fill in the blank. The ___ is longer than my pointer finger.” Synthesis, “What would happen if the objects were not lined up? (One might look longer even though it wasn’t.) What statement can we make to compare the length of _____ and _____? Use the phrases 'longer than' and 'shorter than.' The ___ is longer than the ___. The ____ is shorter than the ____.”

  • Unit 7, Geometry and Time, Lesson 10, Activity 1, Activity Narrative, “All responses should be shared and compared in the synthesis to help build students' understanding of the new vocabulary and the concept of fractional pieces of a whole (MP6).” Student Task Statements, “Split the square into halves.” Image included in the materials of a square. “Color in one of the halves. How much of the square is colored in?” Activity Synthesis, “Invite previously identified students to share for each problem. Sequence the students in the order described in the narrative. ‘One piece of a shape split into two pieces that are the same size is called a half. One piece of a shape split into four pieces that are the same size is called a fourth.’ Formal definitions and visuals of the terms are on the following cards. For each shape, invite students to describe how much is colored in. (A half of the square is colored in. A fourth of the circle is colored in.)”

Indicator 2i

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Materials support the intentional development of MP7: Look for and make use of structure; and MP8: Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning, for students, in connection to the grade-level content standards, as expected by the mathematical practice standards.

The materials reviewed for Imagine Learning Illustrative Mathematics Grade 1 meet expectations for supporting the intentional development of MP7: Look for and make use of structure; and MP8: Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning, for students, in connection to grade-level content standards, as expected by the mathematical practice standards. Students have opportunities to engage with the Math Practices throughout the year.

MP7 is identified and connected to grade-level content, and there is intentional development of the MP to meet its full intent. Students have many opportunities throughout the units to look for, describe, and make use of patterns within problem-solving as they work with support of the teacher and independently. Examples include:

  • Unit 1, Adding, Subtracting, and Working with Data, Lesson 3, Warm-up, students look for and make use of structure when they determine the number of dots in an arrangement without counting each dot. Activity Narrative, “When students use the dot images to relate addition to counting on, they look for and make use of the structure of whole numbers (MP7).” Student Task Statements, “How many do you see? How do you see them?” Students are given 8 images with a group of dots between 1 and 5. Activity Synthesis, “‘How did you know how many dots there are in all?’ Consider asking: ‘Who can restate the way ____ saw the dots in different words? Did anyone see the dots the same way but would explain it differently? Does anyone want to add an observation to the way ____ saw the dots?’”

  • Unit 2, Addition and Subtraction Story Problems, Lesson 14, Activity 1, students look for and make use of structure as they explore the relationship between addition and subtraction through a Compare, Difference Unknown story problems. Activity Narrative, “This also helps them relate addition and subtraction and see that often either operation can be used to solve a problem (MP7).” Launch, “Groups of 2. Give students access to connecting cubes or two-color counters. Display the image in the student book. ‘Tell a story about this picture.’ 1 minute: quiet think time. 2 minutes: partner discussion. ‘Share responses.’” Activity, “‘Read the task statement.’ 5 minutes: partner work time. Encourage students to use the representation to make sense of both equations. Monitor for a group who uses the representation to explain the addition equation and one who explains the subtraction equation.” Activity Synthesis, “‘What are we trying to find out in this story problem?” (How many fewer scissors there are than glue sticks. The difference between the number of scissors and glue sticks.)’ Invite previously identified groups to share. ‘What is the same? What is different? (3, 5, and 8 are in each equation. The numbers represent the same things in both. The 5 is boxed in both. One uses addition and the other uses subtraction. The boxed number is in a different place.)’” 

  • Unit 4, Numbers to 99, Lesson 20, Warm-up, students look for and make use of structure as they use groups of 10 to estimate large numbers of objects. Activity Narrative, “When students notice that they can make a more accurate estimate when the single cubes are grouped into 10s they make use of base-ten structure (MP7).” Student Task Statements, “What is an estimate that’s too high? Too low? About right? (Base ten diagram.)” Launch, “Groups of 2. Display the image. ‘What is an estimate that’s too high? Too low? About right?’ 1 minute: quiet think time.” Activity, “‘Discuss your thinking with your partner.’ 1 minute: partner discussion. ‘Record responses.’” This activity continues on the next card. “‘Let’s look at another image of the same collection.’ Display image. ‘Based on the second image, do you want to revise, or change, your estimates?’” Activity Synthesis, “Did anyone change their original ‘about right’ estimate? Why did you change it?” (I changed it because I see there are at least 50 cubes in the 5 towers.) Let’s look at our revised estimates. Why were our estimates more accurate the second time? (Some of the cubes are organized.) There are 76 cubes.” 

MP8 is identified and connected to grade-level content, and there is intentional development of the MP to meet its full intent. Students have multiple opportunities throughout the materials, with support of the teacher or during independent practice, to use repeated reasoning in order to make generalizations and build a deeper understanding of grade-level math concepts. Examples include:

  • Unit 3, Adding and Subtracting Within 20, Lesson 9, Activity 1, students look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning as they notice the 10+n pattern in teen numbers. Activity Narrative, “When students notice the relationship between teen numbers and the 10+n pattern, they look for and make use of structure (MP7).” Launch, “Groups of 2. Give each group a set of cards, a double 10-frame, and access to at least 20 connecting cubes or two-color counters. ‘We’re going to use our double 10-frames to build teen numbers today. Let's do one together.’ Choose a card. ‘What number is on my card? Let's build that number on the double 10-frame.’ Demonstrate building the teen number. ‘Now we write an equation to show how we built the number.’ Write an equation such as 10+4=14.” Activity, “‘Now you will build more teen numbers with your partner. Make sure you both agree on how to build the number and what equation to write.’ 10 minutes: partner work time. Monitor for students who: build a new ten each time, count the 10 each time, change the ones only.” Activity Synthesis, “When you were building these numbers, what part of the equation was the same? What part was different?” (There was always 10 in each equation. I was adding each time. The total changed and was always a teen number. The number I was adding to 10 changed.)” 

  • Unit 6, Length Measurements Within 120 Units, Lesson 9, Warm-up, students look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning as they notice patterns in the base-ten number system when counting beyond 99. Activity Narrative, “When students notice the patterns in the digits after counting beyond 99 and explain the patterns based on what they know about the structure of the base-ten system, they look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning (MP7, MP8).” Launch, “‘Count by 1, starting at 90.’ Record as students count. ‘Stop counting and recording at 120.’” Activity, “‘What patterns do you see?’ 1-2 minutes: quiet think time. ‘Record responses.’” Activity Synthesis, “What do you notice about the numbers we counted? (Some only have two digits and some have three. After 100, I see the numbers 1–20 again.)” 

  • Unit 7, Geometry and Time, Lesson 9, Cool-down, students look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning as they notice size and shape of the pieces when it is folded are all the same. Student Task Statement, “1. Split the square into halves. 2. Split the circle into fourths. Image of a square and a circle are shown.”