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The purpose of this Number Talk is to elicit strategies and understandings students have for multiplication by 10. These understandings help students develop fluency and will be helpful later in this lesson when students need to be able to represent and solve a problem involving groups of 10.
When students reason why the product increases by 10 as one factor increases by 1, they look for and express regularity in the expressions (MP8).
Find the value of each expression mentally.
The purpose of this activity is for students to represent a situation with a multiplication equation that has a symbol for the unknown and find the number that makes the equation true. Students are able to use an earlier representation to help them solve the problem, however some students may just write the equation and skip-count to find the product. Either is okay.
In the Activity Synthesis, share different ways students represented the problem in addition to the equation. If students used repeated addition, avoid saying “Multiplication is repeated addition,” because while repeated addition is one way to find the product, it is not the meaning of multiplication.
To add movement to this activity, students can work in groups of 4 to make a poster for one of the problems. After each group is done, they can do a Gallery Walk to look for things that are the same or different in the posters.
For each problem:
There are 15 bottles of paint. Han placed 5 bottles of paint on each table. How many tables have paint on them?
Lin’s class has 6 tables. Each table has 2 bags of clay. How many bags of clay does the class have?
Han’s class has 60 markers. There are 10 markers in a pack. How many packs of markers does the class have?
The purpose of this activity is for students to practice solving multiplication problems in which the unknown amount can be the number of groups, the number in each group, or the total. The first three problems have the unknown in each of those locations. The sequence of these problems, the context, and the use of the same factors and product encourages students to use a known fact to find the unknown factor in the “how many in each group?” problem. Students will make the connection between this problem type and division in a future unit. Students are able to choose the representation they use to represent and solve the problems.
Solve each problem. Explain or show your reasoning.
“Today we solved multiplication problems using any strategy or representation that we wanted.”
“What strategy or representation do you find most helpful when you are solving these types of problems? Why?” (I like to draw equal groups so I can see how many groups there are and how many are in each group. I think a diagram is nice to draw because I don’t have to draw all the things, but I can still see the groups. I like to use an equation, so I can see where the unknown number is.)
“What are the most important things to remember when you are solving multiplication problems?” (There are always groups that are the same size. We could be looking for the number of groups, how many things are in each group, or the total number of things in all the groups.)
We learned about equal groups. We created drawings and diagrams to represent situations that involve equal groups.
Situation
Diego has 8 piles of socks. Each pile has 2 socks.
Drawing
Diagram
We wrote multiplication expressions and equations to represent equal groups.
Expression
Equation