The purpose of this activity is for students to use their knowledge of base-ten diagrams and place value to make sense of a subtraction algorithm. Students notice that in both the base-ten drawing and the algorithm, the subtraction happens by place. We can find the difference of two numbers by subtracting ones from ones, tens from tens, and hundreds from hundreds, and adding these partial differences to find the overall difference.
Students also recall that sometimes a place-value unit needs to be decomposed before subtracting. For example, a ten may need to be decomposed into 10 ones first. This decomposition can be seen in both the base-ten drawing and in the algorithm. In the Activity Synthesis, students interpret the work and the reasoning of others (MP3).
In the Activity Synthesis, record a completed version of the written algorithm that includes parentheses around each expanded form expression. Although students should not be required to use parentheses in this way when using this algorithm or other similar student-invented algorithms, this notation helps make the subtraction more clear and helps build foundations for the properties of operations.