This activity continues to encourage place value reasoning for finding the product of a two-digit factor and a one-digit factor.
Students make sense of two representations that show the two-digit factor decomposed by place value: a base-ten diagram and a rectangle. The latter looks like an area diagram that students have used in IM Grade 3, where the side lengths of a rectangle represent two factors. As the factors become larger, however, it becomes necessary to draw rectangles whose side lengths are not proportional. When rectangles no longer accurately represent area, the term “area diagrams” is not used. Instead, “rectangular diagrams” is used in teacher materials and “diagrams” in student materials.
Students then choose a representation to use to find products and write corresponding expressions. In the Activity Synthesis, they learn that the results of multiplying a part of one factor by the other factor can be called “partial products.” In future lessons, students will use rectangular diagrams to represent multiplication of larger numbers.
MLR1 Stronger and Clearer Each Time. Synthesis: Before the whole-class discussion, give students time to meet with 2–3 partners to share and get feedback on their response to which method they prefer when multiplying 6 by 53. Invite listeners to ask questions, to press for details, and to suggest mathematical language. Give students 2–3 minutes to revise their written explanation based on the feedback they receive.
Advances: Writing, Speaking, Listening
Engagement: Provide Access by Recruiting Interest. Optimize meaning and value. Invite students to share examples from their own lives in which they might need to multiply two-digit and one-digit numbers. Invite them to imagine and share why Han and Priya might be multiplying 6 times 53.
Supports accessibility for: Attention, Social-Emotional Functioning