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The purpose of this Number Talk is to elicit strategies and understandings students have for using multiplication to help them divide. These understandings help students develop fluency and will be helpful later in this lesson when students need to find the value of quotients.
Find the value of each expression mentally.
The purpose of this activity is for students to transition from reasoning about division concretely or visually (using base-ten diagrams) to doing so more abstractly (by writing equations). This activity also reinforces the connections between multiplication and division.
Students make sense of three different strategies for dividing 78 by 3 and attend to the connections between the visual and numerical representations of the same quotient. As students do so, they practice reasoning quantitatively and abstractly (MP2).
During the Activity Synthesis, discuss how place-value units play a role in all three strategies.
Lin, Priya, and Tyler used different strategies to find the value of . Their work is shown.
Lin
Priya
Tyler
The purpose of this activity is for students to practice finding the value of division expressions using any strategy that makes sense to them. They may divide the dividend into equal groups or use the divisor to multiply up to the given dividend. They may choose to represent the division or multiplication with base-ten blocks or by drawing diagrams.
During the Activity Synthesis, students share and discuss strategies that rely on place value, properties of operations, and the relationship between multiplication and division (MP7).
Find the value of each quotient. Explain or show your reasoning. Organize your work so it can be followed by others.
If you have time: The 84 students on a field trip are put into groups. Each group has 14 students. How many groups are there?
Optional
Compare Stages 4 and 5 One-digit Divisor Cards
The purpose of this optional activity is for students to practice evaluating division expressions in order to make comparisons. Compare is a center that focuses on the procedural skills needed to solve single- and multi-step word problems. In this stage, students will use division to evaluate and compare quotients within 100.
Play Compare with 2 players.
“Today, we used a variety of strategies and representations to divide greater numbers. How do you like to divide greater numbers? Why?” (I like to use multiplication because I can use the multiplication facts I know to divide. I like to divide in parts because I can think about smaller division facts I know. I like to use drawings of base-ten blocks and think about putting them into equal groups because I can use tens and ones to divide.)