Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Storyline Online
Chester’s Way by Kevin Henkes

11. Chester and Wilson like to play baseball. At the game Chester got 5 hits when he was at bat. Wilson got some hits too. Together they hit the ball 8 times. How many hits did Wilson get when he was at bat?

22. Chester, Wilson, and Lily like to eat watermelon on a hot day. There were many seeds in Wilson’s watermelon slice. Wilson swallowed 10 watermelon seeds. He spit out 7 seeds. How many seeds were in Wilson’s watermelon slice?

33.  Lily like to wear a lot of Band-Aids in the story, so that people thought she was brave. On Monday she wore 7 Band-Aids on both legs. On Tuesday she words 12 new Band-Aids on her arms and legs. How many more Band-Aids did Lily wear on Tuesday than Monday?  


44. Chester, Wilson, and Lily are raking leaves in Chester’s back yard. Chester raked some piles by himself. Lily and Wilson rake 6 piles of leaves together. They raked 15 different piles of leaves altogether. How many leaves did Chester rake by himself? 

4 comments:

  1. Hi Lindsey,

    I love the book, Chester's Way, and also thought about using it. I really enjoyed reading your word problems to correlate with the book.

    1. This was a Join:Change Unknown word problem; we were working to find x.

    2. Part-Part-Whole: Whole Unknown. We were given the amount of watermelon seeds that Wilson swallowed and spit out. We were asked how many there were to begin with.

    3. Compare Problems: Difference Unknown. We were asked to find how many more bandaids Lily was wearing on Tuesday than on Monday, given the amount of bandaids on each day.

    4. Separate: Change Unknown. We were given the result (15) and one piece of the number sentence (6) but asked to find the other piece.

    Great work, Lindsey!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hey!

    Yes! I love Chester and Kevin Henkes books!

    For the first one we have the same thing.

    On the second one I recorded it as separate initial unknown because I did not record the number that you started with. However, you explanation makes sense to me and I am wondering if the problems can be classified as more than one? I told you I was not the best at this!

    Number 3 we have the same thing.

    Number 4 I recorded join initial unknown. I viewed it as ___ + 6 =15. So you do not know the starting point, but again I agree with your reasoning as well and I am wondering if it could be both?

    Do you think it can only be one or the other? I am honestly not sure?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hey!

    Yes! I love Chester and Kevin Henkes books!

    For the first one we have the same thing.

    On the second one I recorded it as separate initial unknown because I did not record the number that you started with. However, you explanation makes sense to me and I am wondering if the problems can be classified as more than one? I told you I was not the best at this!

    Number 3 we have the same thing.

    Number 4 I recorded join initial unknown. I viewed it as ___ + 6 =15. So you do not know the starting point, but again I agree with your reasoning as well and I am wondering if it could be both?

    Do you think it can only be one or the other? I am honestly not sure?

    ReplyDelete
  4. I see why you chose what you did and I also had a hard time wrapping my head around the different types of problems. I think you may be correct.

    ReplyDelete