K-5 friendly lesson
Try one idea, then jump into the activity.These lessons are designed to feel short, friendly, and easy to follow.

Comparison Word Problems up to 10: How Many Fewer?

šŸ“– Let's practice our comparison skills with stories that ask "how many fewer?". Remember, you already know how to do this! It's the same as finding "how many more".

Lesson 6

Concept

When a story asks "how many fewer?", it's just asking you to find the difference between two groups. šŸŽÆ **Your Plan to Solve "How Many Fewer?" Stories:** The plan is the SAME as for "how many more"! 1. **Read the Story:** Find the two groups you are comparing. 2. **Draw Both Groups:** Draw a picture for the bigger group and the smaller group. 3. **Match Them Up:** Draw lines to connect partners. 4. **Count the Extras:** The number of items without a partner is the difference. That's your answer! **Example Story:** "Pat has 4 balls. Jen has 6 balls. How many fewer balls does Pat have than Jen?" * **Groups:** Pat's 4 balls and Jen's 6 balls. * **Match:** Match Pat's 4 balls to 4 of Jen's balls. * **Count Extras:** Jen has 2 balls left over. This is the difference. * **Answer:** Pat has 2 fewer balls. The subtraction sentence is 6 - 4 = 2.

Try it

Let's solve these "fewer" stories! **Instructions:** Read the story and solve. **Problem 1:** Dan found 5 shells. Kim found 8 shells. How many fewer shells did Dan find than Kim? * Subtraction sentence: ___ - ___ = ___ * Answer: ___ fewer shells. **Problem 2:** A gray cat took 7 naps. A black cat took 10 naps. How many fewer naps did the gray cat take? * Answer: ___ fewer naps. **Problem 3:** You have 3 pencils. Your teacher has 9 pencils. How many fewer pencils do you have than your teacher? * Answer: ___ fewer pencils.