🎯 Unit Summary
Unit 2 introduces children to foundational ideas of fractions through hands-on LEGO® building. Instead of memorizing symbols (½, ⅓, ¼), students build, touch, count, and compare equal shares using real models they construct themselves.
This unit teaches:
- what it means for parts to be equal
- how to divide a whole into halves, thirds, and quarters
- how to check fairness using brick-count
- how the number of equal parts affects the size of each share
- how to tell simple math stories involving equal shares
- how to explain thinking using clear mathematical language
All learning emerges from real physical models, following the Brickit cycle:
Sort → Scan → Choose → Build → Explore → Reflect
🔗 Quick Access to All Lessons
Click any lesson below to go directly to the full lesson plan:
🧠 Core Concepts
✔ Equal Shares
Equal shares do not need to look identical.
Shares are equal when they contain:
- the same number of bricks
- (children may also use stud-count when it is easy to observe)
✔ Fairness
Fair sharing means each person receives the same amount, even if shapes vary.
✔ Fraction Size
When the same whole is divided into more equal parts, each part is smaller.
✔ Stories Before Symbols
Children develop fractional reasoning through actions, stories, and models before learning formal symbols (½, ⅓, ¼).
✔ Multiple Representations
Students represent their understanding through:
- models
- drawings
- brick-counts
- written sentences
- oral explanations
📚 Standards Alignment
🧩 Unit Structure
Unit 2 contains five lessons, each designed to build on student understanding progressively.
Equal Parts: Halves & Quarters
Students explore what makes parts equal by dividing simple LEGO models into two and four equal shares. They learn that equal shares do not need identical shapes — only equal amount.
- counting
- partitioning
- checking fairness
- reasoning aloud
Fair Sharing Challenge
Students apply equal-sharing ideas in real-life scenarios. Working in groups, they divide their models between "two people" and "four people," using justification and reasoning to check fairness.
- comparison
- collaboration
- verbal explanation
- fairness reasoning
Building with Thirds
Students investigate how to split models into three equal shares, one of the most cognitively challenging early-fraction concepts. They compare strategies and reconstruct their models into thirds.
- strategy development
- flexibility
- explaining equal shares
- discovering patterns
Comparing Fraction Sizes
Students compare halves, thirds, and quarters of the same whole. They observe that more shares lead to smaller pieces — a foundational fraction principle.
- comparing quantities
- pattern recognition
- justifying reasoning
- multiple representations
Fraction Stories
A creative culmination of the unit. Students build LEGO models and use them to tell math stories involving equal shares. They link actions → models → numbers → drawings, developing reasoning and expressive language.
- narrative math
- modeling
- explanation
- representation
🧰 Teacher Toolkit
Materials Needed
- 200–400 mixed LEGO bricks per group
- 1 device with Brickit App for scanning
- sorting trays (optional)
- mini-whiteboards or printed Student Sheets
Recommended Group Structure
- 2–4 students per group
- rotate roles: scanner, builder, explainer, recorder
- every student participates in counting and reasoning
Teacher Prompts Used Across the Unit
- "How do you know these parts are equal?"
- "What makes this division fair?"
- "Does equal mean identical?"
- "How many bricks are in each share?"
- "Why is this share larger or smaller?"
- "Show your thinking with your model."
🧮 Skills Progression Across Unit 2
| Skill Domain | Early Lesson (2.1–2.2) | Mid Lesson (2.3) | Final Lessons (2.4–2.5) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Equal Shares | halves, quarters | thirds | using all three consistently |
| Fairness | comparing brick amounts | adjusting to make equal | explaining fairness in stories |
| Reasoning | simple statements | comparative reasoning | general rules & narrative |
| Modeling | basic models | rebuilding into thirds | combining models and stories |
| Representation | drawings + numbers | multiple forms | structured math stories |
🧭 Teacher Notes for Successful Lessons
- Always start from actions and models, not from abstract fraction symbols.
- Reinforce the idea: Equal = same number of bricks.
- Use scanning and building routines consistently — they keep students engaged.
- Encourage students to test fairness rather than assume it.
- Allow creative but purposeful rebuilding — variation deepens understanding.
- Promote discussion: the unit works best when children explain their thinking aloud.
📚 Navigation
All 5 lessons are accessible from the Quick Access section above or from individual lesson cards.