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Objectives & Outcomes

The students will be able to use the four operations to convert units of time, and measure the
passage of time, using seconds, minutes, hours, days, months, and years.

Materials Needed
paper plates, brads, scissors, paper punch, markers

Prepare ahead of time:  Time conversion chart for each student, gather supplies as needed
for clock making, adapt clock making as necessary.

Procedure
Opening to Lesson
 Display some quotes about time for students to
read: http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/topics/topic_time.html
 Ask students: What do each of the quotes have in common?
 Allow for responses and discussion. Lead discussion to time.

Body of Lesson
Modeling
 Display actual time measurement tools (clocks, calendars, stopwatch, etc.) or the
images of the same.
 Ask students why each measurement tool is used.  What is it used for?  (Measuring
days, hours, minutes, seconds – races, meetings, for cooking, etc.)
 Allow for responses and discussion.
 Tell students they will need to learn the units of time, and how to measure time.

Guided Practice
 Give students a chart showing the different units of time and conversions.  (60 sec. =
1 min, 60 min = 1 hour, etc.)
 Distribute clocks with movable hands.  (These can be made easily using cardboard or
paper plates: http://lifestyle.howstuffworks.com/crafts/paper-crafts/paper-clocks.htm)
 Allow time for students to build their paper plate clocks if necessary.
 Review each unit of time with students:  seconds, minutes, hours, days (optional:
months/years, decades, centuries)
 Using the clocks, show students the passage of time in minutes and hours.  Give
students examples of the passage of time:  How many minutes/hours have passed
between 10:00 and 10:50, 12:45 to 1:55, etc.?  How many minutes’ old are they?
 Use as many examples as necessary based on students’ needs.
 Tell students they will now create ten problems, which will be solved by another
student.  Tell students to mix up the questions and to use real life events.  (For example,
how much time passes during the school day from 8:30 AM to 3:15 PM, days in a school
year, etc.  How many seconds long is gym class?)
 Give students time to complete their problems.  Tell them to create an Answer Key.
 Once finished, distribute the problems randomly to other students.  Give students
time to answer each problem.
 Once completed, they will exchange the problems to be checked by the original
writer.

Independent Practice
 Create worksheets related to the passage of time and time unit conversion.

Closing
 Ask students: Why do you think time goes faster when you are having fun, but seems
to slow down when you are doing something that is not fun?
 Allow for responses and discussion.

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