Thinking Summary · 1
MasteredVisual Logic: 0 of 1 parts shaded.
[Discovery] One cookie (circle) is shared into 2 EQUAL halves. Shade 1 of the 2 parts to show what one friend got.
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Active StepWelcome to "Cupcake Quarter Cut", a 1st Grade Fractions mission at the Seedling (entry-level) level, staged in our bakery scenario. The mission opens with a hands-on prompt: "One cookie (circle) is shared into 2 EQUAL halves. Shade 1 of the 2 parts to show what one friend got." You'll work with the numbers 2, 1, 8 and arrive at a final answer of 2 across 3 guided steps.
Behind the bakery story, this lesson is really about fractions aligned to CCSS 1.G.A.3. Partition circles and rectangles into two and four equal shares — halves and quarters as the first fraction concept. The key strategy this mission asks you to internalise: Count the pieces: 2. That tells you the name.
A general pattern to watch for in 1st Grade fractions — illustrated with example numbers below, which may differ from this lesson's: Confusing "half" with "two pieces" regardless of equality. Two pieces only count as halves if they are the SAME size. Cut a paper unevenly and ask "is this a half?" — let them say no. If you get stuck on "Cupcake Quarter Cut", the adaptive Socratic hints below escalate from a gentle nudge to a worked-out strategy — the same way a one-on-one tutor would coach you through it.
Grade 1 · Fractions
Mission Progress
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Thinking Summary · 1
MasteredVisual Logic: 0 of 1 parts shaded.
[Discovery] One cookie (circle) is shared into 2 EQUAL halves. Shade 1 of the 2 parts to show what one friend got.
1
Active StepEverything you need to know about the Socratic experience.
One cookie (circle) is shared into 2 EQUAL halves. Shade 1 of the 2 parts to show what one friend got. Hint: Tap "+" until the bar has exactly 2 equal parts, then tap 1 of them.
If we cut the same cookie into MORE equal pieces (say 8 instead of 2), would each piece be BIGGER, SMALLER, or the SAME size? If you get stuck, the adaptive hint is: Bigger denominator → smaller piece. This is the seed of fraction logic.
Seedling missions anchor the visual model with small, friendly numbers — ideal as the first attempt at this topic. Within 1st Grade Fractions, expect numbers in the corresponding range.
Calling unequal pieces "halves" — eyeballing instead of folding. A half MUST be exactly the same size as the other half. Always fold and check by laying one piece on top of the other.
Shapes (Partitioning a circle or rectangle into halves and quarters is shape composition in reverse.). Open /grade-1/shapes to start that topic's missions.
Yes. Every mission, handbook page, and topic hub is mapped to a specific CCSS code (visible in the page header). The curriculum follows the CCSS coherence map: Grade 1 number sense → Grade 3 multiplicative thinking → Grade 6 ratio reasoning, with each grade building strictly on the prior year's foundations.
Pure discovery is inefficient — kids hit a wall and quit. Guided Discovery scaffolds the path: a careful sequence of questions, models, and adaptive hints leads the learner toward the insight without revealing it. Inquiry AI's hint system fires automatically after ~15s of hesitation or on the first mistake, escalating from a Socratic nudge to a worked example only when needed. Mistakes are diagnosed via "misconception keys" so the hint matches the actual wrong-thinking pattern.