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Difficulty Practice Guide

Medium Grade 1 Comparison Word Problems Word Problems

This page shows what medium practice should demand for grade 1 comparison word problems word problems. The goal is not a larger worksheet. The goal is to make the student's reasoning visible enough to choose the next better problem.

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What Changes At This Difficulty

Add one meaningful reasoning layer so students must plan before calculating.
Expected structure: 2-2 step problem solving.
Vocabulary load: low with minimal distractors.
Reasoning depth: at least 2 relationship layers.

Student Work Signals

A good medium problem should expose the bottleneck

MathRoutine watches for whether the student understood the situation, wrote a useful setup, handled the calculation, and answered the exact question asked.

1

separate useful numbers from background details

2

complete a two-step setup

3

interpret the result with the correct unit

Medium Readiness

What should be visible in student work

A difficulty page earns its place only when it tells parents and teachers what to look for at this exact level. For medium grade 1 comparison word problems word problems, the attempt should show more than a final number.

Evidence 1

The student separates useful quantities from background details.

Evidence 2

The solution uses a planned two-step or three-step structure.

Evidence 3

Units, labels, or comparison language are interpreted after calculation.

Difficulty-Matched Examples

How this level should feel

These examples are not meant to be the whole practice set. They show the kind of reasoning pressure medium work should create for grade 1 comparison word problems word problems.

Eli has 14 shells. Ava has 9 shells. How many more shells does Eli have than Ava?

Reasoning strategy

Find the gap between the two amounts: 14 - 9.

Support cue

Explain that 'how many more' asks for the difference, not the total.

Why This Matters

The paid value is diagnosis, not answer lookup

Basic gives repeated targeted practice. Pro becomes useful when the student needs help understanding wording, recovering the setup, or seeing the same misconception return across attempts.

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Diagnosis Examples

What this level should help identify

Difficulty only matters if it exposes a clearer learning need. At this level, MathRoutine looks for whether the miss comes from the setup, the computation, the wording, a hidden quantity, or the final question.

Possible student miss

The student subtracts in the order the numbers appear.

MathRoutine should separate

Comparison language is not yet tied to larger-minus-smaller reasoning.

Follow-up practice

Use 'how many more' and 'how many fewer' problems with matched diagrams.

Possible student miss

The student reports what is left when the question asks what changed.

MathRoutine should separate

Final-state and change-amount roles are being mixed.

Follow-up practice

Practice start-change-end tables with the unknown in different positions.

Placement Decision

When to move difficulty

Move down

Move down if the student understands the math only after the wording is simplified.

Stay here

Stay here when the student solves correctly but still needs practice planning the sequence of steps.

Move up

Move to hard when the student can explain why each step is needed before calculating.

Compare Nearby Levels

Same topic, different reasoning load

Use the topic page for the full skill map, or compare adjacent difficulty guides when the student is between levels.

Full topic guideEasy guideHard guide

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