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Students reason about the area of a rectangle with a variable side length. They express the area for different values of the variable and when the value is unknown. Students review symbolic notation for showing multiplication as they express the product of a number and a variable. The reasoning here will be helpful later in the lesson when students apply the distributive property in the context of finding the areas of rectangles whose side lengths are expressions with variables.
Allow students 2–3 minutes of quiet work time, followed by a whole-class discussion.
What is the area of the rectangle if is:
3 units?
2.2 units?
unit?
If students indicate they are not sure how to start and haven't drawn a diagram of a rectangle, suggest that they do so.
Select students to share their response to each question. Consider displaying a diagram of a rectangle and annotating it to illustrate students’ responses or explanations. Highlight the following points:
In this activity, students use expressions with variables to represent lengths of sides and areas of rectangles. These expressions are used to help students understand the distributive property and its use in creating equivalent expressions.
Arrange students in groups of 2–3. Give students 3–4 minutes of group work time, followed by a quick whole-class discussion.
Here are two rectangles. The length and width of one rectangle are 8 and 5 units. The width of the other rectangle is 5 units, but its length is unknown so we labeled it .
Write an expression for the sum of the areas of the two rectangles.
The two rectangles can be composed into one larger rectangle, as shown.
What are the length and width of the new, larger rectangle?
Solicit students’ responses to the first and third questions. Display two of the expressions, as shown. (Expressions that are equivalent to these are fine.) Ensure that everyone agrees that one expression is an acceptable response to the first question and the other is an acceptable response to the third question.
Ask students to look at the two expressions and invite them to share something they notice and something they wonder. Here are some things that students might notice.
If no students mention the last point—that the expressions are equivalent—ask them to discuss this idea.
In this activity, students are presented with several partitioned rectangles. They identify the length and width for each rectangle, and then write expressions for the area in two different ways, as:
Students reason that these two expressions must be equal since they both represent the total area of the partitioned rectangle (MP2). In this way, students see several examples of the distributive property. Students may choose to assign values to the variable in each rectangle to check that their expressions for area are equal.
Keep students in groups of 2–3. Give students 10 minutes of group work time, followed by a whole-class discussion.
Use Collect and Display to direct attention to words collected and displayed from an earlier lesson. Invite students to borrow language from the display as needed, and update it throughout the lesson.
For each rectangle, write an expression for the width, an expression for the length, and two expressions for the total area. Record them in the table. Check your expressions in each row with your group and discuss any disagreements.
| rectangle | width | length | area as a product of width times length |
area as a sum of the areas of the smaller rectangles |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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A |
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B |
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C |
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D |
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E |
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F |
Select students to share their expressions for the areas of Rectangles D and F. Ask them to explain how each expression relates to the diagram. Display and annotate the diagrams, if possible. Ask students:
Display the expressions from the rows for Rectangles D and F:
| D | 6 | |||
| F | 5 |
Tell students that as they work with a greater variety of expressions, it is helpful to be able to refer to the parts in the expression (just as students learned to use “factors” and “product” to refer to the parts in a multiplication, and “dividend,” “divisor,” and “quotient” for division.)
Introduce the word “term” to students. Explain that a term is a part of an expression. A term can be a single number, a single variable, or a product of numbers and variables. In the displayed expressions, 5, , , and are terms. Invite students to identify a few other terms in their completed table.
Add “term” to the display of other vocabulary words from the unit (or revise similar words or phrases students used previously to name the same concept).
Display a pair of equivalent algebraic expressions from this lesson (such as and ) and a pair of equivalent numerical expressions from a previous lesson (such as 33(10 + 2) and ).
Ask students to compare the expressions. Discuss questions, such as:
Students should see that their work with expressions containing variables is an extension of the work they did with expressions with numbers.
The distributive property can also help us write equivalent expressions with variables. We can use a diagram to help us understand this idea.
Here is a rectangle composed of two smaller Rectangles A and B.
Based on the drawing, we can make several observations about the area of the large rectangle:
We can see that multiplying 3 by the sum is equivalent to multiplying 3 by 2 and then 3 by and adding the two products. This relationship is an example of the distributive property.
When working with expressions of all kinds, it helps to be able to talk about the parts. In an expression like , we call the 6 and “terms.”
A term is a part of an expression. A term can be a single number, a single variable, or a product of numbers and variables. Some examples of terms are 10, , , and .