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In this activity, students investigate fractions that are equal to 1. This concept helps students make sense of the exponent division rule explored in a following activity. It is expected that students will try to compute the numerator and denominator of the fraction. Monitor for students who instead make use of structure to find factors in the numerator and denominator that can be used to show multiplication by 1 (MP7).
Give students 5 minutes of quiet work time. Expect students to attempt to work out all of the multiplication without using exponent rules. Follow with a brief whole-class discussion.
What is the value of the expression? Be prepared to explain your reasoning.
The goal of this discussion is for students to see that a fraction is often easier to analyze when dividing matching factors from the numerator and denominator to show multiplication by 1. Invite students to share their answer and reasoning. If not brought up in students’ explanations, provide the following example and ask students how it could be used in this situation:
If time allows, ask students "What has to be true about a fraction for it to equal 1?" (The numerator and denominator must be the same value and something other than 0.) Then invite students to create their own fraction that is equivalent to 1 and has several bases and several exponents.
In this activity, students explore patterns to discover the rule that (MP8). Students will work only with cases where and will extend the rule to include cases where or in following activities and lessons.
Tell students to close their books or devices (or to keep them closed). Display the table from the Task Statement for all to see. Give students 1 minute of quiet think time, and ask them to be prepared to share at least one thing they notice and one thing they wonder. Record and display responses for all to see without editing or commentary.
If not mentioned by students, make sure to emphasize the following ideas:
Tell students to open their books or devices and explain that they can skip one entry in the table, but they have to be able to explain why they skipped it. Give students 5–6 minutes to complete the remaining questions before a whole-class discussion.
Complete the table to explore patterns in the exponents when dividing powers of 10. Use the “expanded” column to show why the given expression is equal to the single power of 10. You may skip a single box in the table, but if you do, be prepared to explain why you skipped it.
| expression | expanded | single power of 10 |
|---|---|---|
The goal of this discussion is to reinforce the exponent rule for dividing powers of 10. Introduce and explain the visual display prepared earlier. This display should be kept visible to students throughout the remainder of the unit.
Continue to reinforce student understanding of this rule by writing out an expanded form of each expression when discussing the following questions:
In this activity, students extend exponent rules to discover why it makes sense to define as 1 (MP8). Students also critique a statement that is intentionally incorrect and improve it by clarifying meaning, correcting errors, and adding details (MP3).
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give students 5 minutes of quiet work time followed by a partner discussion and then a whole-class discussion.
So far we have looked at powers of 10 with exponents greater than 0. Consider what would happen to our patterns if we included 0 as a possible exponent?
Write as a single power of 10. Explain or show your reasoning.
Write as a single power of 10. Explain or show your reasoning.
The purpose of this discussion is to solidify the concept that . Invite students to share their answers to the questions, and then ask them to share their thinking about what means.
Use Critique, Correct, Clarify to give students an opportunity to improve a sample written response by correcting errors, clarifying meaning, and adding details.
Next, introduce and explain the visual display prepared earlier. This display should be kept visible to students throughout the remainder of the unit.
Optional
This activity expands on a previous Cool-down as students generate different representations of the same number to solidify what they have learned about exponents.
Students are not expected to make an exponent of 8 using negative exponents, but do not discourage it if they do. Explain to these students that, while the rules still work when using negative exponents, it is not yet clear what the value of is, and this will be explored in following lessons.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give them 5 minutes of quiet work time before asking students to share their responses with their partner. Follow with a whole-class discussion.
Write as many expressions as you can that have the same value as . Focus on using exponents, multiplication, and division.
The goal of this discussion is for students to share different expressions that have the same value as . Tell students to compare responses with their partner, and invite students to share examples that show creativity or that combine multiple rules together.
To include more students in the discussion, consider asking:
The goal of this discussion is to check that students can explain why the exponents are subtracted when rewriting a quotient of powers of 10 with a single exponent, and why it makes sense to define as equal to 1. Consider recording student responses and displaying them for all to see.
Here are some questions for discussion:
In this lesson, we developed a rule for dividing powers of 10: Dividing powers of 10 is the same as subtracting the exponent of the denominator from the exponent of the numerator. To see this, take and divide it by .
We know that has 5 factors that are 10, and 2 of these factors can be divided by the 2 factors of 10 in to make 1. That leaves factors of 10, or .
This will work for other powers of 10, too. For example .
This rule also extends to . If we look at , using the exponent rule gives , which is equal to . So dividing by doesn’t change its value. That means if we want the rule to work when the exponent is 0, then must equal 1.