If you have a set of Cuisenaire rods handy, this would be a GREAT time to take them out and USE them as we "play" with ideas about using Cuisenaire Rods for mathematical instruction. If you don't have any Cuisenaire rods readily available, borrow a set of rods from your intermediate grade level classrooms (sets of them were sent this past summer). In the meantime, you can click one of the links below to access an interactive website for Cuisenaire Rods (using physical rods is far better if you have them available!)
STAGES & PHASES
ALL STUDENTS should begin at the beginning. Even our older students (and their teachers!) need to begin by having free play with the Rods before trying to "do something" with them. As you continue reading, look for activity ideas indicated by this icon 🔺.
GETTING STARTED with FREE PLAY
When introducing math manipulatives, an essential first step is to allow the students some free play with them. Free play should be, just that, free. Giving specific directions or over-organizing this initial activity destroys the essential character of free play. It takes a certain amount of faith to stand by watching children building towers and making animal pictures from the rods - especially when the construction seems to have no particular mathematical significance, but the time to explore will pay off in the end (I promise!).
Free play gives teachers a chance to observe their students' creativity and problem-solving skills and allows for informal conversations about what they see. As students "play", they learn to make choices in regards to which rods to use – this will be an invaluable skill when they use Cuisenaire rods later during instruction.
Using the math manipulatives during free play is time well-spent, but it doesn't have to happen just during the precious little time you have for math instruction; you might decide to offer the manipulatives that will be used later in the week/month for free play on a rainy day during indoor recess or perhaps as part of a brain break activity.
DEVELOPING AN UNDERSTANDING OF EQUIVALENCE
"Two red rods are the same length as 1 purple rod."
"Three white rods are the same length as 1 green rod."
"A red rod and a green rod together are the same as 1 yellow."
"If the white rod is 1, then the yellow rod is 5."
FORMALIZING YOUR EXPLORATION
You've given time for free play and some time to just "notice". Now let's take a look at specific activities you can use in your classroom to develop your students' number sense and their ability to use the Cuisenaire rods to solve math problems.
🔺Place the YELLOW ROD in front you. How many ways can you make a length that is equivalent to the yellow rod? Can you think of any other ways that are not shown on the graphic to the right?
🔺Which single rods are equivalent to doubles of another? How many combinations can you find? Do you notice any patterns? Can we predict which rods can be made with a double?
DEVELOPING AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE WHOLE
🔺 If the blue rod is one whole, which rod represents 1/3? How do you know? What is another way you can know?
🔺 If the red rod represents 1/3, which rod represents the whole? What question did you ask yourself to begin answering this question?
🔺 If the whole is the orange rod and red rod pushed together, which rod represents 1/2? What strategy did you use to determine the answer? What other strategy could be used?
🔺 A train that is made from two rods has an equivalent length to brown. If one of the rods is yellow, what color is the other rod? (equivalence)
How would having physical rods help you to discover that the other rod must be light green?
How would having physical rods help you to discover that the other rod must be light green?
🔺 Make a train with 2 rods: One of the rods is half the length of the other rod. What does the train look like? What is the fractional value of each color rod in this model as compared to the whole? What other combinations of rods could be used to build a different train with the same parameters? (fractions)
How would having physical rods help you to discover that there are multiple representations? Is there a pattern to the rods that can/cannot be used to build this train? Notice how using the rods makes the complex idea that the light green (which is 1/2 the length of the dark green) represents 1/3 of the whole.
How would having physical rods help you to discover that there are multiple representations? Is there a pattern to the rods that can/cannot be used to build this train? Notice how using the rods makes the complex idea that the light green (which is 1/2 the length of the dark green) represents 1/3 of the whole.
🔺 What is 10 divided by 4? How does this model demonstrate the quotient? (division with fractional quotients)
Do you see the solution of 2½ in the model below? The orange rod is 10 units. The purple rod is 4 units. We needed 2½ purple rods to equal the same length of one orange rod.
🔺 Is 21 a multiple of 3? How does the model below help you to know? (multiples)
🔺 Is 21 a multiple of 4? How does the model below help you to know? (multiples)
Notice that the value of 21 was made from 2 ten rods (orange) and a 1 rod (white).
How does the model below help you to see that 21 is a multiple of 3, but not 4?
🔺 Is 3 a factor of 21? How does the model above help you to know? (factors)
🔺 Is 4 a factor of 21? How does the model above help you to know? (factors)
How does the model shown above help you to see that 3 IS a factor of 21, but 4 is not?
🔺 What is the sum of 3/5 and 1/3. How do you know? (fractions)
How does this model help you to see that the sum is 14/15?
🔺 The area of a rectangle is 56. One side of the rectangle is 7 units. What are the lengths of the other sides? (geometry)
How does this model help you see that the lengths of the sides are 7, 7, 8, and 8?
🔺 What is 1/2 of 1/3? Use the image below (or better yet, build the model!) to find the solution. (fraction calculation)
How does this model help you see that 1/2 of 1/3 is 1/6?
(NOTE: be sure that "fit to page" is NOT checked when printing)
SOME VIDEO LINKS for PROFESSIONAL GROWTH
- It's All About the Whole - explore how any configurations of rods can be the whole and use the whole to determine the relational value of the other rods
- Building Number Sense with Cuisenaire Rods - watch a very young child begin understanding the concept of decomposing by building combinations with Cuisenaire rods
- Division with Cuisenaire Rods - see how Cuisenaire rods can help to build conceptual understanding of division with fractional remainders
- Finding Factors - see how children use Cuisenaire rods to find the factors of a number
- Equivalent Fractions - a very quick simple explanation
- Adding Fractions - a Cuisenaire model approach