Comparing Numbers: Greater than, Less than, Equal to (>, <, =)

About the Lesson
Comparing numbers helps students decide which number is bigger, smaller, or the same. Students will use the symbols greater than (>), less than (<), and equal to (=) to compare two numbers.
This skill strengthens number sense, prepares students for ordering numbers, and builds confidence in using math symbols in real-life situations.

Examples
πŸ“Œ Everyday Comparison
β€œApples in Baskets”
Basket A: 5 apples
Basket B: 8 apples
β†’ 8 is greater than 5 β†’ 5 < 8

πŸ“Œ Equal Numbers
β€œCounting Books”
Sarah has 6 books
John has 6 books
β†’ 6 is equal to 6 β†’ 6 = 6

πŸ“Œ Using Number Line
Point to 12 and 15
β†’ 12 comes before 15
β†’ 12 < 15

Learning Objectives
βœ… Compare two numbers up to 50 using <, >, = symbols.
βœ… Use words: greater than, less than, equal to correctly.
βœ… Apply comparisons to real-life examples.
βœ… Demonstrate understanding using number lines and objects.

Fun Practice Activities
1. Comparing Numbers Worksheet ✏️
Part 1: Fill in the blank with >, <, or =

9 __ 7

14 __ 14

22 __ 30

Part 2: Circle the greater number
(12, 19), (8, 5), (27, 21)

πŸ” Answer Key Review: Teacher models answers on number line.

2. Interactive Comparison Quiz 🎲
Materials: Number cards (1–50), counters, whiteboards
Who Has More?
Teacher shows 2 cards: 16 and 22
Ask: β€œWhich is greater?”
β†’ Students hold up β€œ22” card and say: β€œ22 is greater than 16.”
Symbol Match:
Teacher writes: 11 __ 15
Students write correct symbol on whiteboard (<). Equal Pairs Challenge: Teacher says: β€œI have 10 fingers. You have 10 fingers. Are they equal?” β†’ Students shout: β€œYes! 10 = 10.” Partner Compare: Each student draws 2 number cards. Partner compares using correct symbol. Example: β€œI have 25 and 19 β†’ 25 > 19.”

Offline Homework: Comparison Booklet πŸ“–
πŸ“ Instructions:
1. Draw 3 pairs of real-life items (e.g., pencils, stars, apples).
2. Under each drawing, write a comparison sentence with symbols.
Example:

🍎🍎 vs. 🍎🍎🍎🍎 β†’ 2 < 4

πŸš—πŸš—πŸš— vs. πŸš—πŸš—πŸš— β†’ 3 = 3

3. Add a cover page: β€œComparing Numbers with <, >, =”.
4. Share with family by reading comparisons aloud.

This lesson helps students master comparing numbers using <, >, =, reinforcing number sense, math vocabulary, and real-life applications.