1 / 17

Operation Action

Operation Action. Common Addition and Subtraction Situations. Addition and Subtraction. Start/Change/End Putting in/Taking Out Add to/Take from. Addition and Subtraction. Part/Part/Whole Joining/Separating Put together/Take Apart. Addition and Subtraction. Absolute Comparion

gay-gomez
Download Presentation

Operation Action

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Operation Action Common Addition and Subtraction Situations

  2. Addition and Subtraction • Start/Change/End Putting in/Taking Out Add to/Take from

  3. Addition and Subtraction • Part/Part/Whole Joining/Separating Put together/Take Apart

  4. Addition and Subtraction • Absolute Comparion • Compare

  5. Start/Change/EndAdd to/Result Unknown The candy shop has 8 pounds of fudge on display. The owner added another 5 pounds to the display. How much candy is on display?

  6. Start/Change/EndAdd to/Change Unknown The candy shop has 8 pounds of fudge on display. The owner added candy to the display until there was 13 pounds of candy on display. How much candy did the owner add to the display?

  7. Start/Change/EndAdd to/Start Unknown The candy shop had some fudge in the display case. The owner added 5 pounds of fudge to the display. Now 13 pounds of fudge is on display, how much fudge was in the display before the fudge was added?

  8. Start/Change/EndTake from/Result Unknown There were 13 pounds of fudge in the display at the candy shop. A customer bought 5 pounds. How much fudge is left in the display?

  9. Start/Change/EndTake from/Change Unknown There were 13 pounds of fudge on display at the candy store. A customer bought some fudge. After this purchase 8 pounds of fudge was on display. How much fudge did the customer buy?

  10. Start/Change/EndTake from/Start Unknown Some fudge was on display at the candy store. After a customer bought 5 pounds of candy, 8 pounds remained on display. How much fudge was originally on display?

  11. Put together/Take ApartTotal Unknown The candy store has two kinds of fudge. Currently, 8 pounds of chocolate fudge and 5 pounds of peanut butter fudge were on display. How much fudge is currently displayed?

  12. Put together/Take apartAddend Unknown A candy store currently is displaying 13 pounds of fudge. Eight pounds of the displayed candy is chocolate fudge, the rest is peanut butter fudge. How much of the displayed candy is peanut butter fudge?

  13. Put together/Take ApartBoth addends unknown The candy store sold 13 pounds of fudge. Some of the fudge sold was chocolate and some peanut butter. How much of each kind of fudge was sold?

  14. Absolute ComparisonDifference Unknown A candy store sells chocolate and peanut butter fudge. If they sell 13 pounds of chocolate fudge and 8 pounds of peanut butter fudge, how much more chocolate fudge was sold?

  15. Absolute ComparisonDifference Unknown A candy store sells chocolate and peanut butter fudge. If they sell 13 pounds of chocolate fudge and 8 pounds of peanut butter fudge, how much less peanut butter fudge was sold?

  16. Absolute ComparisonBigger Unknown The candy store sold 5 pounds more chocolate fudge than peanut butter fudge. They sold 8 pounds of peanut butter fudge. How much chocolate fudge was sold?

  17. Absolute ComparisonSmall Set Unknown The candy store sold 5 pounds less peanut butter fudge than chocolate fudge. They sold 13 pounds of chocolate fudge. How much peanut butter fudge was sold?

More Related