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Sorting out travel

The purpose of this activity is to engage students in sorting shapes by a common feature.

Illustrations of an airplane, car, hot air balloon, motorbike, bus, boat, scooter, and a rickshaw.

Tags

  • AudienceKaiakoStudents
  • Curriculum Level3
  • Learning AreaMathematics and Statistics
  • Resource LanguageEnglish
  • Resource typeActivity
  • SeriesRich learning activities

About this resource

This activity assumes the students have experience in the following areas:

  • Describing how shapes are alike and not alike.
  • Matching shapes by appearance, using features such as global appearance, number of sides/corners, colour, and size.
  • Sorting shapes by common features.
  • Using mathematical language to describe similarities and differences in shapes, such as “straight/curvy”, “corners (sharp/blunt)”, “side”, “large/small”, “red, yellow, blue, …”

The problem is sufficiently open ended to allow the students freedom of choice in their approach. It may be scaffolded with guidance that leads to a solution, and/or the students might be given the opportunity to solve the problem independently.

The example responses at the end of the resource give an indication of the kind of response to expect from students who approach the problem in particular ways.

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    Sorting out travel

    Achievement objectives

    GM1-2: Sort objects by their appearance.

    Required materials

    See Materials that come with this resource to download:

    • Sorting out travel CM (.pdf)

    Activity

    Here are some different forms of transport.

    Show how they could be sorted into groups that share common features.

    Explain what the members of each group have in common.

    Note to teacher: This activity may be carried out with material objects to sort, or images on cards. A printable page of transport images for this use is provided in the Sorting out travel CM (.pdf), we recommend using a random selection of about half of the images.

    A grid showing some different forms of transport: cars, buses, trucks, helicopters, planes and sailboats.

    The following prompts illustrate how this activity can be structured around the phases of the Mathematics Investigation Cycle.

      Make sense

      Introduce the problem. Allow ākonga time to read it and discuss in pairs or small groups. 

      • What do you think the problem is about?
      • What do you need to do?
      • How are the cards alike and how are they different?
      • Which part of the problem could you start with?
      • Can you rephrase the problem in your own words? (Which objects are like each other?)

      Plan approach

      Discuss ideas about how to solve the problem. Emphasise that for now you want ākonga to say how they would solve the problem, not to actually solve it.

      • Which strategies can you use to start?
      • What different features could you use to sort the cards?
      • How will you organise the cards, so they do not get mixed up?
      • How will you record what you have done so you can sort the cards in a different way? (Digital photographs are useful).
      • Can you try some ideas out and check if they work?

      Take action

      Allow ākonga time to work through their strategy, and find a solution to the problem.

      • Which cards belong together?
      • What are similar about those cards?
      • Are there any other cards that belong in the same group? How do you know?
      • Can you make another group from some of the left over cards?
      • Can you find a group for all the remaining items?
      • What other ways could you sort the same set of cards?

      Convince yourself and others

      Allow ākonga time to check their answers and then either have them pair share with other groups or ask for volunteers to share their solution with the class.

      • What is your solution?
      • How does your solution answer the question?
      • How can you explain to someone else how you sorted the cards?
      • Can you justify why some cards have been put in the group they are in?
      • Is your solution the only possible way to sort the cards?
      • What might you do differently next time? What other ways to sort can you find?
      • How is sorting important in other things that you do?

      Examples of work

       | 

      The student sorts a collection of cards into groups by colour and resorts the cards by a different feature, mode of transport.

      A collection transportation of cards accompanied by a text box depicting the conversation between student and teacher.

      The student sorts the cards using a criterion that they create, the environment of travel (air, water, land).

       

      A collection of transportation cards accompanied by a text box depicting the conversation between student and teacher.

      The quality of the images on this page may vary depending on the device you are using.