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4th Grade Math Journal Prompts for Math Journals or Math Talks
4th Grade Math Journal Prompts for Math Journals or Math Talks
4th Grade Math Journal Prompts for Math Journals or Math Talks
4th Grade Math Journal Prompts for Math Journals or Math Talks
4th Grade Math Journal Prompts for Math Journals or Math Talks
4th Grade Math Journal Prompts for Math Journals or Math Talks
4th Grade Math Journal Prompts for Math Journals or Math Talks
4th Grade Math Journal Prompts for Math Journals or Math Talks
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Description

If you're looking for ways to enhance your students' opportunity to reason mathematically--math journals are a fantastic approach--and a foundational tool in my mathematical teaching!

Math journals were wildly successful in my math classroom. In fact, they were so successful that I brought them into my homeschool. I have always enjoyed seeing students persevere and problem-solve as well as seeing them work to justify their answers. Writing and discussing mathematics is a powerful teaching tool. 

How to Use Math Journals:

You can use journals however you see fit. I've included 2 prompts per week. There are 74 slides for you to present to students in a whole class mode, small groups, or distance learning. Students can use paper, a notebook, or a folder for these problems.

In this set I've also included a printable version of the math journal if having one per student works better for you.

Students will solve the problem and explain their thinking. You can use these to have mathematical discussions in the classroom or you can ask students to journal their work and assess them.

You can have students complete this independently, allow or invite them to talk to their peers, or open these up for class discussions. I've included self-selection cards for grading and student autonomy. If you'd like, you can allow students to choose which prompt you'll grade each time you collect their journals.

How these are designed:

These second grade journals are aligned to the third grade CCSS. All CCSS domains are covered in this journal. The problems are higher-level thinking to allow you to use these with all students and any curriculum/pacing. The higher-level thinking problems (at depth of knowledge levels 2 and 3) allow students to remain challenged while working to construct valid and strong mathematical arguments. 

Benefits of Math Journals in a Classroom

  • These can be used as a teaching tool for students constructing mathematical arguments
  • Serve as a formative assessment tool as these prompts are designed to help you identify student misconceptions about important key mathematical concepts
  • Students engage in deeper mathematical thinking and enhance conceptual understanding
  • Mathematical vocabulary is strengthened
  • Intrinsically motivating as students are asked to share their thinking or opinions and most questions are open-ended in part

What You'll Get

  • Prompts (74 prompts) You have 74 slides or 37 printable pages of weekly prompts (2 days per page)
  • Math prompts that include open-ended, higher level thinking questions
  • Aligned to CCSS from grade level below
  • Higher Level Thinking Questions (Depth of Knowledge levels 2&3)
  • Used for teaching and formative assessment
  • Answer key (37 pages)
  • Instructions, rubrics, sentence starters, and more (22 pages)
Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

4th Grade Math Journal Prompts for Math Journals or Math Talks

Hatchling Learning LLC
3 Followers
$8.99

Highlights

Digital downloads
Grades icon
Grades
4th
Standards icon
Standards
Pages
102
Answer Key
Included with rubric
Teaching Duration
1 Year

Description

If you're looking for ways to enhance your students' opportunity to reason mathematically--math journals are a fantastic approach--and a foundational tool in my mathematical teaching!

Math journals were wildly successful in my math classroom. In fact, they were so successful that I brought them into my homeschool. I have always enjoyed seeing students persevere and problem-solve as well as seeing them work to justify their answers. Writing and discussing mathematics is a powerful teaching tool. 

How to Use Math Journals:

You can use journals however you see fit. I've included 2 prompts per week. There are 74 slides for you to present to students in a whole class mode, small groups, or distance learning. Students can use paper, a notebook, or a folder for these problems.

In this set I've also included a printable version of the math journal if having one per student works better for you.

Students will solve the problem and explain their thinking. You can use these to have mathematical discussions in the classroom or you can ask students to journal their work and assess them.

You can have students complete this independently, allow or invite them to talk to their peers, or open these up for class discussions. I've included self-selection cards for grading and student autonomy. If you'd like, you can allow students to choose which prompt you'll grade each time you collect their journals.

How these are designed:

These second grade journals are aligned to the third grade CCSS. All CCSS domains are covered in this journal. The problems are higher-level thinking to allow you to use these with all students and any curriculum/pacing. The higher-level thinking problems (at depth of knowledge levels 2 and 3) allow students to remain challenged while working to construct valid and strong mathematical arguments. 

Benefits of Math Journals in a Classroom

  • These can be used as a teaching tool for students constructing mathematical arguments
  • Serve as a formative assessment tool as these prompts are designed to help you identify student misconceptions about important key mathematical concepts
  • Students engage in deeper mathematical thinking and enhance conceptual understanding
  • Mathematical vocabulary is strengthened
  • Intrinsically motivating as students are asked to share their thinking or opinions and most questions are open-ended in part

What You'll Get

  • Prompts (74 prompts) You have 74 slides or 37 printable pages of weekly prompts (2 days per page)
  • Math prompts that include open-ended, higher level thinking questions
  • Aligned to CCSS from grade level below
  • Higher Level Thinking Questions (Depth of Knowledge levels 2&3)
  • Used for teaching and formative assessment
  • Answer key (37 pages)
  • Instructions, rubrics, sentence starters, and more (22 pages)
Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Tell and write time to the nearest minute and measure time intervals in minutes. Solve word problems involving addition and subtraction of time intervals in minutes, e.g., by representing the problem on a number line diagram.
Measure and estimate liquid volumes and masses of objects using standard units of grams (g), kilograms (kg), and liters (l). Add, subtract, multiply, or divide to solve one-step word problems involving masses or volumes that are given in the same units, e.g., by using drawings (such as a beaker with a measurement scale) to represent the problem.
Draw a scaled picture graph and a scaled bar graph to represent a data set with several categories. Solve one- and two-step “how many more” and “how many less” problems using information presented in scaled bar graphs. For example, draw a bar graph in which each square in the bar graph might represent 5 pets.
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