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STANDARD 4.1 (NUMBER AND NUMERICAL OPERATIONS) ALL STUDENTS WILL
DEVELOP NUMBER SENSE AND WILL PERFORM STANDARD NUMERICAL OPERATIONS AND
ESTIMATIONS ON ALL TYPES OF NUMBERS IN A VARIETY OF WAYS. |
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A.
Number Sense |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Use
real-life experiences, physical materials, and technology to construct
meanings for numbers (unless otherwise noted, all indicators for grade 5
pertain to these sets of numbers as well).
·
All
fractions as part of a whole, as subset of a set, as a location on a
number line, and as divisions of whole numbers
·
All decimals
|
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2.
Recognize
the decimal nature of United States currency and compute with money. |
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3.
Demonstrate
a sense of the relative magnitudes of numbers. |
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4.
Use whole
numbers, fractions, and decimals to represent equivalent forms of the
same number. |
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5.
Develop and
apply number theory concepts in problem solving situations.
·
Primes,
factors, multiples |
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6.
Compare and
order numbers. |
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B.
Numerical Operations |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Recognize
the appropriate use of each arithmetic operation in problem situations. |
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2.
Construct,
use, and explain procedures for performing addition and subtraction with
fractions and decimals with:
·
Pencil-and-paper
·
Mental math
·
Calculator |
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3.
Use an
efficient and accurate pencil-and-paper procedure for division of a
3-digit number by a 2-digit number. |
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|
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5.
Check the
reasonableness of results of computations. |
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6.
Understand
and use the various relationships among operations and properties of
operations. |
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C.
Estimation |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Use a
variety of estimation strategies for both number and computation. |
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2.
Recognize
when an estimate is appropriate, and understand the usefulness of an
estimate as distinct from an exact answer. |
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3.
Determine
the reasonableness of an answer by estimating the result of operations. |
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4.
Determine
whether a given estimate is an overestimate or an underestimate. |
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STANDARD 4.2 (GEOMETRY AND MEASUREMENT) ALL STUDENTS WILL
DEVELOP SPATIAL SENSE AND THE ABILITY TO USE GEOMETRIC PROPERTIES,
RELATIONSHIPS, AND MEASUREMENT TO MODEL, DESCRIBE AND ANALYZE PHENOMENA. |
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A.
Geometric Properties |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Understand
and apply concepts involving lines and angles.
·
Notation for
line, ray, angle, line segment
·
Properties
of parallel, perpendicular, and intersecting lines
·
Sum of the
measures of the interior angles of a triangle is 180° |
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2.
Identify,
describe, compare, and classify polygons.
·
Triangles by
angles and sides
·
Quadrilaterals, including squares, rectangles, parallelograms,
trapezoids, rhombi
·
Polygons by
number of sides
·
Equilateral,
equiangular, regular
·
All points
equidistant from a given point form a circle |
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3.
Identify
similar figures. |
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4.
Understand
and apply the concepts of congruence and symmetry (line and rotational). |
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B.
Transforming Shapes |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Use a
translation, a reflection, or a rotation to map one figure onto another
congruent figure. |
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2.
Recognize,
identify, and describe geometric relationships and properties as they
exist in nature, art, and other real-world settings. |
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C.
Coordinate Geometry |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Create
geometric shapes with specified properties in the first quadrant on a
coordinate grid. |
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D.
Units of Measurement |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Select and use appropriate units to measure angles and area. |
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2.
Convert
measurement units within a system (e.g., 3 feet = ___ inches). |
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3.
Know
approximate equivalents between the standard and metric systems (e.g.,
one kilometer is approximately 6/10 of a mile) |
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4.
Use
measurements and estimates to describe and compare phenomena. |
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E.
Measuring Geometric Objects |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Use a
protractor to measure angles. |
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2.
Develop and
apply strategies and formulas for finding perimeter and area.
·
Square
·
Rectangle |
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3.
Recognize
that rectangles with the same perimeter do not necessarily have the same
area and vice versa. |
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4.
Develop
informal ways of approximating the measures of familiar objects (e.g.,
use a grid to approximate the area of the bottom of one’s foot). |
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STANDARD
4.3 (PATTERNS AND ALGEBRA) ALL STUDENTS WILL REPRESENT AND
ANALYZE RELATIONSHIPS AMONG VARIABLE QUANTITIES AND SOLVE PROBLEMS
INVOLVING PATTERNS, FUNCTIONS, AND ALGEBRAIC CONCEPTS AND PROCESSES.
|
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A.
Patterns |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Recognize,
describe, extend, and create patterns involving whole numbers.
·
Descriptions
using tables, verbal rules, simple equations, and graphs |
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B.
Functions and Relationships |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Describe arithmetic operations as functions, including
combining operations and reversing them. |
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2.
Graph points satisfying a function from T-charts, from
verbal rules, and from simple equations. |
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C.
Modeling |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Use number
sentences to model situations.
·
Using
variables to represent unknown quantities
·
Using
concrete materials, tables, graphs, verbal rules, algebraic
expressions/equations |
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2.
Draw
freehand sketches of graphs that model real phenomena and use such
graphs to predict and interpret events.
·
Changes over
time
·
Rates of
change (e.g., when is plant growing slowly/rapidly, when is temperature
dropping most rapidly/slowly) |
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D.
Procedures |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Solve simple linear equations with manipulatives and
informally
·
Whole-number coefficients only, answers also whole numbers
·
Variables on one side of equation |
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STANDARD 4.4
(DATA ANALYSIS, PROBABILITY, AND DISCRETE MATHEMATICS) ALL
STUDENTS WILL DEVELOP AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE CONCEPTS AND TECHNIQUES OF
DATA ANALYSIS, PROBABILITY, AND DISCRETE MATHEMATICS, AND WILL USE THEM
TO MODEL SITUATIONS, SOLVE PROBLEMS, AND ANALYZE AND DRAW APPROPRIATE
INFERENCES FROM DATA. |
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A.
Data Analysis |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Collect,
generate, organize, and display data.
·
Data
generated from surveys |
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2.
Read,
interpret, select, construct, analyze, generate questions about, and
draw inferences from displays of data.
·
Bar graph,
line graph, circle graph, table
·
Range,
median, and mean |
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3.
Respond to
questions about data and generate their own questions and hypotheses. |
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B.
Probability |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Determine
probabilities of events.
·
Event, probability of an event
·
Probability of certain event is 1 and of impossible event
is 0 |
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2.
Determine
probability using intuitive, experimental, and theoretical methods
(e.g., using model of picking items of different colors from a bag).
·
Given numbers of various types of items in a bag, what is
the probability that an item of one type will be picked
·
Given data obtained experimentally, what is the likely
distribution of items in the bag |
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3.
Model situations involving probability using simulations
(with spinners, dice) and theoretical models. |
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C.
Discrete Mathematics—Systematic Listing and Counting |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Solve counting
problems and justify that all possibilities have been enumerated without
duplication.
·
Organized lists, charts, tree diagrams, tables |
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2.
Explore the
multiplication principle of counting in simple situations by
representing all possibilities in an organized way (e.g., you can make 3
x 4 = 12 outfits using 3 shirts
and 4 skirts). |
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D.
Discrete Mathematics—Vertex-Edge Graphs and Algorithms |
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Building upon knowledge and
skills gained in preceding grades, by the end of Grade 5, students will: |
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1.
Devise
strategies for winning simple games (e.g., start with two piles of
objects, each of two players in turn removes any number of objects from
a single pile, and the person to take the last group of objects wins)
and express those strategies as sets of directions. |
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+ or - |
STANDARD
4.5 (MATHEMATICAL PROCESSES) ALL STUDENTS WILL USE MATHEMATICAL
PROCESSES OF PROBLEM SOLVING, COMMUNICATION, CONNECTIONS, REASONING,
REPRESENTATIONS, AND TECHNOLOGY TO SOLVE PROBLEMS AND COMMUNICATE
MATHEMATICAL IDEAS. |
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A.
Problem Solving |
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At each grade level,
with respect to content appropriate for that grade level, students will: |
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1.
Learn
mathematics through problem solving, inquiry, and discovery. |
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2.
Solve
problems that arise in mathematics and in other contexts (cf. workplace
readiness standard 8.3).
·
Open-ended
problems
·
Non-routine
problems
·
Problems
with multiple solutions
·
Problems
that can be solved in several ways |
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3.
Select and
apply a variety of appropriate problem-solving strategies (e.g., “try a
simpler problem” or “make a diagram”) to solve problems. |
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4.
Pose
problems of various types and levels of difficulty. |
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5.
Monitor
their progress and reflect on the process of their problem solving
activity. |
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B.
Communication |
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At each grade level, with respect to content appropriate for that
grade level, students will: |
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1.
Use
communication to organize and clarify their mathematical thinking.
·
Reading and
writing
·
Discussion,
listening, and questioning |
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2.
Communicate
their mathematical thinking coherently and clearly to peers, teachers,
and others, both orally and in writing. |
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3.
Analyze and
evaluate the mathematical thinking and strategies of others. |
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4.
Use the
language of mathematics to express mathematical ideas precisely. |
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C.
Connections |
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At each grade level, with respect to content appropriate for that
grade level, students will: |
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1.
Recognize
recurring themes across mathematical domains (e.g., patterns in number,
algebra, and geometry). |
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2.
Use
connections among mathematical ideas to explain concepts (e.g., two
linear equations have a unique solution because the lines they represent
intersect at a single point). |
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3.
Recognize
that mathematics is used in a variety of contexts outside of
mathematics. |
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4.
Apply
mathematics in practical situations and in other disciplines. |
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5.
Trace the
development of mathematical concepts over time and across cultures (cf.
world languages and social studies standards). |
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6.
Understand
how mathematical ideas interconnect and build on one another to produce
a coherent whole. |
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D.
Reasoning |
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At each grade level, with respect to content appropriate for that
grade level, students will: |
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1.
Recognize
that mathematical facts, procedures, and claims must be justified. |
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2.
Use
reasoning to support their mathematical conclusions and problem
solutions. |
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3.
Select and
use various types of reasoning and methods of proof. |
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4.
Rely on
reasoning, rather than answer keys, teachers, or peers, to check the
correctness of their problem solutions. |
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5.
Make and
investigate mathematical conjectures.
·
Counterexamples as a means of disproving conjectures
·
Verifying
conjectures using informal reasoning or proofs. |
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6.
Evaluate
examples of mathematical reasoning and determine whether they are valid. |
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E.
Representations |
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At each grade level, with respect to content appropriate for that
grade level, students will: |
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1.
Create and
use representations to organize, record, and communicate mathematical
ideas.
·
Concrete
representations (e.g., base-ten blocks or algebra tiles)
·
Pictorial
representations (e.g., diagrams, charts, or tables)
·
Symbolic
representations (e.g., a formula)
·
Graphical
representations (e.g., a line graph) |
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2.
Select,
apply, and translate among mathematical representations to solve
problems. |
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3.
Use
representations to model and interpret physical, social, and
mathematical phenomena. |
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F.
Technology |
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At each grade level, with respect to content appropriate for that
grade level, students will: |
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1.
Use
technology to gather, analyze, and communicate mathematical information. |
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2.
Use
computer spreadsheets, software, and graphing utilities to organize and
display quantitative information. |
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3.
Use graphing calculators and computer software to
investigate properties of functions and their graphs. |
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4.
Use
calculators as problem-solving tools (e.g., to explore patterns, to
validate solutions). |
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5.
Use
computer software to make and verify conjectures about geometric
objects. |
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6.
Use computer-based laboratory technology for mathematical
applications in the sciences. |