LEARN NC

K–12 teaching and learning · from the UNC School of Education

Learn more

Related pages

  • "Shaping up" with ordinal numbers: This lesson teaches students ordinal numbers through literature, and a visual memory game, and it reviews shapes, colors, and ordinal numbers with a listening and following-directions assessment.
  • Leap frogs tend toward the center?: Students learn the meanings of the central tendency concepts range, mean, median, and mode. They will make origami frogs, jump them across a track and record the length of their jumps and the total number of jumps across trials.
  • Supermarket Sweep Day 2: Students will participate in a supermarket game and follow a shopping list. Students will compare the quantity of items “purchased” and graph results. Students will also learn a song about shopping in a supermarket.

Related topics

Help

Please read our disclaimer for lesson plans.

Legal

This page copyright ©2008. Terms of use

Learning outcomes

Students will:

  • demonstrate an understanding of tallying
  • use tallying as a means of gathering information
  • use gathered information to make comparisons

Teacher planning

Time required for lesson

2 hours

Materials/resources

  • paper
  • pencils
  • crayons
  • large picture of the White House
  • Homework Tally Sheet
  • large sheet of paper for class tally
  • map of the United States

Technology resources

computer with internet access

Pre-activities

Show picture of the White House. Discuss the location in reference to North Carolina, the best way to get there, and the people who live there.

Activities

Day 1

  1. Take an online tour of the White House using the glimpse tour.
  2. Let students talk about their favorite room in the White House.
  3. Students take a sheet of paper and fold it in half. On the left side, they name and illustrate their favorite room in their own home. On the right side, name and illustrate their favorite room of the White House.
  4. After the drawings are complete, students will vote for their favorite room by a show of hands. Demonstrate how to display the same information using tally marks.
  5. Display these drawings in the classroom.
  6. Explain and assign Homework Tally Sheet (see attachment for explanation).

Day 2

  1. Review tallying. Make class tally chart using two of the items from each child’s homework sheet. Do class estimation of the number of windows, rooms, bathrooms, doors, chimneys, elevators, and staircases in the White House using the classroom tally sheet. Go to the White House Facts page for the information.
  2. Compare the actual information found in your tour to your class estimations. Email the President, Vice President, and First Lady asking for information on their favorite room.

Assessment

  • Results from the independent classroom tallying
  • Completed drawings
  • Teacher observation

Supplemental information

<

h3>Comments

This lesson can be modified for kindergarten through third grades. This lesson can be extended to include pets, families, color words, etc.

North Carolina Curriculum Alignment

Information Skills (2000)

Grade 1

  • Goal 4: The learner will EXPLORE and USE research processes to meet information needs.

Mathematics (2004)

Grade 1

  • Goal 4: Data Analysis and Probability - The learner will understand and use data and simple probability concepts.
    • Objective 4.01: Collect, organize, describe and display data using line plots and tallies.