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Missing Addends

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05/08/2020

Incredible Resource

Smooth, fast user experience. Free lessons organized smoothly. Website looks awesome. Remember only grades K-6. This is my new favorite website resource and I have used MANY. The lessons are typically visually supportive, flow nice, are efficient, provide some differentiation built it, and apply to state standards. I mean... what more can you ask for really?

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Our Missing Addend Subtrahend lesson plan teaches students how to find missing addends and subtrahends by applying fact families. Students also learn how to solve for missing addends and subtrahends in word problems.

Included with this lesson are some adjustments or additions that you can make if you’d like, found in the “Options for Lesson” section of the Classroom Procedure page. One of the optional additions to this lesson is to have your students play a memory game using the cards from the lesson activity where there is a target number and students must find the correct addends.

Description

What our Missing Addends lesson plan includes

Lesson Objectives and Overview: Missing Addends demonstrates how to understand and apply fact families to finding missing addends and subtrahends. This lesson also addresses how to solve for missing addends and subtrahends in word problems. At the end of the lesson, students will be able to understand and apply fact families to finding missing addends and subtrahends. Students will also be able to solve for missing addends and subtrahends in word problems. This lesson is for students in 1st grade and 2nd grade.

Classroom Procedure

Every lesson plan provides you with a classroom procedure page that outlines a step-by-step guide to follow. You do not have to follow the guide exactly. The guide helps you organize the lesson and details when to hand out worksheets. It also lists information in the blue box that you might find useful. You will find the lesson objectives, state standards, and number of class sessions the lesson should take to complete in this area. In addition, it describes the supplies you will need as well as what and how you need to prepare beforehand.

Options for Lesson

Included with this lesson is an “Options for Lesson” section that lists a number of suggestions for activities to add to the lesson or substitutions for the ones already in the lesson. If you’d like to add to the lesson activity, you can add in a third person for a more challenging approach or can have your students write down their answers on a score sheet during the game. For additional practice, you could have your students solve problems using online games and apps. Finally, for an additional activity, you can have your students play a memory game using the cards from the lesson activity where there is a target number and students must find the correct addends.

Teacher Notes

The teacher notes page includes lines that you can use to add your own notes as you’re preparing for this lesson.

MISSING ADDENDS LESSON PLAN CONTENT PAGES

Missing Addends/Subtrahends

The Missing Addends lesson plan includes two content pages. Missing addends are numbers missing from addition problems and missing subtrahends are numbers missing from subtraction problems. You can solve for an unknown value in an equation on either side of the equal sign and in either position for the addend or subtrahend.

We represent missing values using placeholders, which signify an unknown amount. The placeholder can be any symbol such as a variable (x), empty space ( ), question mark (?), or random shape (). By using symbols, you reinforce the missing value.

Missing Addend Examples

For the problem 9 + ? = 12, we ask ourselves what number added to nine will equal twelve? We can solve this problem using subtraction: 12 – 9 = 3. We can also solve this problem by counting up from 9 to 12. Either way, the solution is 3.

For the problem ? + 7 = 13, we ask ourselves what number added to seven will equal thirteen? We can solve this problem using subtraction: 13 – 7 = 6. We can also solve this problem by counting up from 7 to 13. Either way, the solution is 6.

Missing Subtrahend Examples

For the problem 15 – ? = 11, we ask ourselves what number subtracted from fifteen will equal eleven? We can solve this problem using addition: 11 + ? = 15. We can also solve this problem by counting down from 15 to 11. Either way, the solution is 4.

For the problem 10 – ? = 3, we ask ourselves what number subtracted from ten will equal three? We can solve this problem using addition: 3 + ? = 10. We can also solve this problem by counting down from 10 to 3. Either way, the solution is 7.

Fact Families

Knowing fact families is very helpful for finding missing addends and subtrahends. For example, if you know that 3 + 4 = 7, you can use that knowledge to find the missing value in the following equation: 7 – ? = 3.

Creating fact families assists with understanding how to switch addition problems to subtraction problems and vice versa. You can solve problems faster and easier because addition and subtraction are related.

Word Problems

We use word problems to solve the real-world applications of missing addends and subtrahends.

The lesson includes two examples. In the first example, someone is planning a birthday party for their dog. For the party, ten dogs will come to their house. They want to buy party favors for each dog, but they want to buy different favors for the girl dogs and boy dogs. They know that six of the dogs are girls, but they don’t know how many are boys.

To solve this problem, we first need to create an equation: 6 + ? = 10. We ask ourselves what number plus 6 will equal 10? We can then solve this problem using subtraction: 10 – 6 = 4. We can also solve this problem by counting up from 6 to 10. Either way, we discover that the solution is 4. Therefore, there will be four boy dogs at the party.

The lesson also shows how you can use pictures to solve problems with missing addends. For this problem, you could draw 10 dogs and circle the six girl dogs in red. You could then circle the rest of the dogs in blue. These are the boys. Count the dogs with blue circles. There are four boy dogs!

The lesson closes with a second example that students can review to reinforce their understanding of the lesson material and how to solve word problems involving missing addends and subtrahends.

MISSING ADDENDS LESSON PLAN WORKSHEETS

The Missing Addends lesson plan includes two worksheets: an activity worksheet and a practice worksheet. You can refer to the guide on the classroom procedure page to determine when to hand out each worksheet.

SALUTE CARD GAME ACTIVITY WORKSHEET

Students will work in groups of three to complete the lesson activity. Each group will rotate the role of the dealer. For each round, the dealer will hand both of the other students in their group a card face down. When they say “Salute!”, the players will place their card facing out on their forehead. The dealer will then add the two cards together and say the sum out loud. The players will then figure out what number is on their card (the missing addend) using the sum and the other player’s card. They will then rotate who the dealer is and play again.

MISSING ADDENDS PRACTICE WORKSHEET

For the practice worksheet, students will solve eight problem, showing how they solved them. They will also solve a word problem.

Worksheet Answer Keys

This lesson plan includes an answer key for the practice worksheet. If you choose to administer the lesson pages to your students via PDF, you will need to save a new file that omits these pages. Otherwise, you can simply print out the applicable pages and keep these as reference for yourself when grading assignments.

Additional information

grade-level

1st Grade, 2nd Grade

subject

Math

State Educational Standards

LB.Math.Content.1.OA.D.8

Customer Reviews
5.0 Based on 1 Reviews
5 ★
100% 
1
4 ★
0% 
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Write a Review

Thank you for submitting a review!

Your input is very much appreciated. Share it with your friends so they can enjoy it too!

Filter Reviews:
05/08/2020

Incredible Resource

Smooth, fast user experience. Free lessons organized smoothly. Website looks awesome. Remember only grades K-6. This is my new favorite website resource and I have used MANY. The lessons are typically visually supportive, flow nice, are efficient, provide some differentiation built it, and apply to state standards. I mean... what more can you ask for really?

AB
Andrew B.
US US

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