Which is correct: "A dozen eggs is?" Or "A dozen eggs are?"
I remember being in elementary school,
and my teachers making a big deal about the unit.
until one day, I was in the grocery store,
and I wanted to buy an apple, but I couldn't buy one apple.
I had to buy a whole bag of apples.
So I did. I bought one bag of apples,
I took it home, I took one apple out of the bag, and I cut it up.
One bag, one apple, one slice.
Which of these is the real "one"?
and that's what my elementary teachers were trying to tell me.
Because this is the important idea behind whole number place value,
decimal place value and fractions.
Our whole number system depends
on being able to change what we count as "one".
Our whole number system depends on being able to change units.
There are two ways to change units.
We can compose, and we can partition.
we take a bunch of things, we put them together to make a bigger thing,
We take 12 eggs, put them together to make a group,
and we call that group a dozen.
A dozen eggs is a composed unit.
Other examples of composed units
include a deck of cards, a pair of shoes, a jazz quartet
and of course, Barbie and Ken make a couple.
But think about a loaf of bread.
because we don't get a bunch of slices from a bunch of different bakeries
and put them together to make a loaf.
No, we start with a loaf of bread
and we cut it into smaller pieces called slices,
so each slice of bread is a partitioned unit.
Other examples of partitioned units
include a square of a chocolate bar, a section of an orange
The important thing about units is that once we've made a new unit,
we can treat it just like we did the old unit.
We can compose composed units,
and we can partition partitioned units.
and then those packs get put together in sets of four
So when I buy one box of toaster pastries,
One box, four packs, eight pastries.
And when I share a slice of pizza with a friend,
we have to cut "it" into two smaller pieces.
So a box of toaster pastries is composed of composed units,
and when I split a slice of pizza,
I'm partitioning a partitioned unit.
But what does that have to do with math?
In math, everything is certain.
Here's why: we start counting at one,
and we count up to nine: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,
and then we get to 10, and in order to write 10,
That one means that we have one group,
and the zero helps us remember
that it means one group, not one thing.
So when I think about 100,
it's like the box of toaster pastries.
10 things
And that depends on what "one" is,
it depends on what the unit is.
So think about all the times in math when you write the number one.
No matter what place that one is in,