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Collaborating Teachers Grades 4-5 October 9, 2013 Factors and Multiples & Distributive Property

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Collaborating Teachers. Grades 4-5 October 9, 2013 Factors and Multiples & Distributive Property. Tile Activity. Count out 12 tiles. Arrange them so that they form a rectangle. Tile Activity. Count out 12 tiles. Arrange them so that they form a rectangle. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Collaborating Teachers

Collaborating Teachers

Grades 4-5October 9, 2013

Factors and Multiples & Distributive Property

Page 2: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

• Count out 12 tiles.• Arrange them so that they form a rectangle.

Page 3: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

• Count out 12 tiles.• Arrange them so that they form a rectangle.

• What multiplication sentence could you write about your rectangle?

• Where in your figure do you see the numbers in your multiplication sentence?

Page 4: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

Suppose you made this rectangle.

Page 5: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

What multiplication sentence could you write about your rectangle?

Page 6: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

What multiplication sentence could you write about your rectangle?

3 x 4 = 12 (for example)

Page 7: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

Where in your figure do you see the numbers in the math sentence?

3 x 4 = 12

Page 8: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

3 x 4 = 12

3

4

1 2 3 4

5 6 7 8

9 10 11 12

Page 9: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

3

4

1 2 3 4

5 6 7 8

9 10 11 12

We say that the numbers 3 and 4 are factors of 12. The number 12 is a multiple of 3 and a multiple of 4.

Page 10: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

• Can you write a division sentence about your rectangle?

• Where are the factors and multiples in your number sentence?

Page 11: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

12 ÷ 3 = 4, for example.

Page 12: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

12 ÷ 3

3

4

1 2 3 4

5 6 7 8

9 10 11 12

We say that the numbers 3 and 4 are factors of 12. The number 12 is a multiple of 3 and a multiple of 4.

Page 13: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

• What other rectangle can you make with 12 tiles?

• What factors and multiples does your new rectangle illustrate?

Page 14: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

• Use your 12 tiles make a rectangle with a length of 7.

• Does it work?• Is 7 a factor of 12?• Is 12 a multiple of 7?• What if you try to use your 12 tiles to make a

rectangle with a length of 5? Do you think it will work? Why?

Page 15: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

• What are ALL the rectangles you can make with 12 tiles?

• What are ALL the factors of 12?

Page 16: Collaborating Teachers

Tile Activity

• On another day, do a similar activity with 20 tiles, 24, 30, 36, 48. Try the same activity with 13 tiles.

Page 17: Collaborating Teachers

Factor and Multiple Games Online

1) HoodaMath – Factor Feederwww.hoodamath.com/games/factorfeeder.html

2) nrich Factors and Multiples Gamewww.nrich.maths.org/5468

3) BBC.UK – The Legend of Dick and Domwww.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/ks2/maths/number/factors_multiples/play

Page 18: Collaborating Teachers

More Factor and Multiple Games Online

4) Johnnie’s Math Page – Ghost Multiples, Egg Multiples, and more

www.jmathpage.com/JIMSMultiplicationfactorsandmultiples.html

5) Math Playground - Pumpkin Multiples and morewww.mathplayground.com/multiples.html

6) Count On- Octopus factorswww.counton.org/games/map-numbers/octopus

Page 19: Collaborating Teachers

? ? ?

• How can you help your students build fluency with factors and multiples?

Page 20: Collaborating Teachers

Distributive Property of Multiplication over Addition

Let’s begin with some mental math. Solve these problems and remember what strategy you used:

8 x 243 x 569 x 53

Page 21: Collaborating Teachers

Distributive Property of Multiplication over Addition

Did your strategy incorporate the distributive property?

8 x 243 x 569 x 53

Page 22: Collaborating Teachers

Distributive Property of Multiplicationover Addition

Can you apply the distributive property to this problem?

32 x 15

Video 5.2 from Number Talks: Helping Children Build Mental Math and Computation Strategies by Sherry Parrish5th grade teacher Lee Ann Davidson

Page 23: Collaborating Teachers

Video 5.2

How did the students break the numbers apart?

Is this the distributive property?

Page 24: Collaborating Teachers

Introducing the Distributive Property Meaningfully

• Using tiles, show how you would model:4 x 3 – Choose one color of tile.4 x 8 – Choose a different color of tile.4 x (3 + 8)

In your representation, how is the four distributed over the three and eight?How could you use these examples to build students’ understanding of the distributive property?

Page 25: Collaborating Teachers

4 x 3

4 x 3

Page 26: Collaborating Teachers

(4 x 3) + (4 + 8)

(4 x 3) + (4 x 8)

Page 27: Collaborating Teachers

3 + 8

Page 28: Collaborating Teachers

4(3 + 8)

4(3 + 8)

Page 29: Collaborating Teachers

Modeling with base 10 blocks

Use base 10 blocks to model the following:3 x 14What mental math strategy could be represented by

your base 10 blocks?

Page 30: Collaborating Teachers

3 x 143 x 14

3 x 14 = (3 x 10) + (3 x 4) Now show 7 x 22 with base 10 blocks.

Page 31: Collaborating Teachers

7 x 22

7 x 22 =

Page 32: Collaborating Teachers

7 x 22

7 x 22 = ( 7 x 20 + (7 x 2) = 140 + 14 = 154

Page 33: Collaborating Teachers

Or: 7 x 22

7 x 22 =

Page 34: Collaborating Teachers

7 x 22

7 x 22 = (7 x 10) + (7x 12) = 70 + 84 = 154

Page 35: Collaborating Teachers

Try 11 x 12

Page 36: Collaborating Teachers

11 x 12

Page 37: Collaborating Teachers

11 x 12

Page 38: Collaborating Teachers

11 x 12

11 x 12 = (10 x 10) + (10 x 1) + (2 x 10) + ( 2 x 1)= 100 + 10 + 20 + 2 = 132

Page 39: Collaborating Teachers

3 Methods for Multiplying

11 11 11x 12 x 12 x 12

12 22 2 120 110 20132 132 10 100

Which one would you use? 132How do the other methods work?

Page 40: Collaborating Teachers

11 x 12

110 + 22 = 132

11X 12 22 110 132

Page 41: Collaborating Teachers

11 x 12

110 + 22 = 132

11X 12 22 110 132

Page 42: Collaborating Teachers

11 x 12

120 + 12 = 132

11X 12 12120132

Page 43: Collaborating Teachers

11 x 12

120 + 12 = 132

11X 12 12120132

Page 44: Collaborating Teachers

11 x 12

100 + 10 + 20 + 2 = 132

11X 12 2 20 10 100 132

Page 45: Collaborating Teachers

11 x 12

100 + 10 + 20 + 2 = 132

11X 12 2 20 10 100 132

Page 46: Collaborating Teachers

? ? ?

• How can you help your students make sense of the distributive property of multiplication over addition?

Page 47: Collaborating Teachers

Using the Distributive Property to Divide

• 84 ÷ 6• 6 x ? = 84

Page 48: Collaborating Teachers

Using the Distributive Property to Divide

• 84 ÷ 6• 6 x ? = 84• 60 + 24 = 84

Page 49: Collaborating Teachers

Using the Distributive Property to Divide

• 84 ÷ 6• 6 x ? = 84• 60 + 24 = 84• 60 ÷ 6 = 10• 24 ÷ 6 = 4

Page 50: Collaborating Teachers

Using the Distributive Property to Divide

• 84 ÷ 6• 6 x ? = 84• 60 + 24 = 84• 60 ÷ 6 = 10• 24 ÷ 6 = 4• 84 ÷ 6 = 10 + 4 = 14

Page 51: Collaborating Teachers

Try this problem!

• 144 ÷ 9

Page 52: Collaborating Teachers

Two strategies for 144 ÷ 9

144 ÷ 9144 ÷ 9

9 x ? = 144 9 x ? = 144

144 = 72 + 72144 = 90 + 54

72 ÷ 9 = 890 ÷ 9 = 10

72 ÷ 9 = 854 ÷ 9 = 6

144 ÷ 9 = 8 + 8 = 16 144 ÷ 9 = 10 + 6 = 16

Page 53: Collaborating Teachers

Two online videos

Khan Academy – an explanation of the distributive property with a helpful visual model.

https://www.khanacademy.org/math/arithmetic/order-of-operations/ditributive_propertyLearnzillion – Approaches the distributive

property as a strategy for difficult facts. www.learnzillion.com

/lessons/966-use-the-distributive-property-of-multiplicaion-to-solve-unfamiliar-facts