Your teacher will give you a set of cards. Take turns with your partner to match a description with an equation.
For each match that you find, explain to your partner how you know it’s a match.
For each match that your partner finds, listen carefully to their explanation. If you disagree, discuss your thinking, and work to reach an agreement.
Student Lesson Summary
Long division gives us a way of finding decimal representations for fractions. It finds the quotient one digit at a time, from left to right. For example:
To find a decimal representation for , we can divide 9 by 8.
So .
To find a decimal representation for , we can divide 8 by 9.
So . This is a repeating decimal because the digits keep going in this same pattern over and over.
Sometimes it is easier to work with the decimal representation of a number, and sometimes it is easier to work with its fraction representation. It is important to be able to work with both. For example, consider the following pair of problems:
Priya earned dollars doing chores, and Kiran earned as much as Priya. How much did Kiran earn?
Priya earned dollars doing chores, and Kiran earned 1.2 times as much as Priya. How much did Kiran earn?
Since , these are both exactly the same problem, and the answer is or . When we work with percentages in later lessons, the decimal representation will come in especially handy.
Long division is a way to show the steps for dividing numbers in decimal form. It finds the quotient one digit at a time, from left to right.
Here is the long division for .
A repeating decimal has digits that keep going in the same pattern over and over. The repeating digits are marked with a line above them.
The decimal representation for is , which means 0.3333333 . . . .
The decimal representation for is , which means 1.136363636 . . . .
Standards Alignment
Building On
Addressing
Building Toward
7.RP.3
Use proportional relationships to solve multistep ratio and percent problems.