Not all roles available for this page.
Sign in to view assessments and invite other educators
Sign in using your existing Kendall Hunt account. If you don’t have one, create an educator account.
The purpose of this Number Talk is to elicit strategies and understandings students have for division using partial quotients. These understandings help students develop fluency and will be helpful later in this lesson when they interpret algorithm notation that shows partial quotients.
Find the value of each expression mentally.
The purpose of this activity is for students to develop an understanding of the vertical method of recording partial quotients and use it to divide. In the Launch, students look at an algorithm that uses partial quotients and annotate it to show the multiplication that takes place. Then students find the value of several division expressions.
Jada uses partial quotients to find out how many groups of 7 are in 392.
Analyze Jada’s steps in the partial-quotients algorithm.
Show another way you can decompose 392 to divide by 7.
The purpose of this activity is for students to apply their understanding of partial quotients and the vertical recording method to divide four-digit numbers. They also identify some errors that are common when finding quotients this way. When students determine where the errors are and correct them, they critique the reasoning of others and construct viable arguments (MP3).
Andre and Elena divide 2,315 by 5. Before they begin, Andre says, “I can already tell that the quotient is going to be less than 500.”
Here is Andre and Elena’s work. Each student made one or more errors. Identify the errors each student made. Then show a correct computation.
Andre’s Work
Elena’s Work
Optional
Here are 4 calculations to find the value of , but each one is unfinished.
Complete at least 2 of the unfinished calculations.
A
B
C
D
“Today we looked at different ways to divide multi-digit numbers by one-digit divisors. We saw estimating as a rather efficient way to find a quotient. How might we use estimation to find or ?” (For , notice that is 30 less than , which is . Thirty is , so is . For , notice that is close to , which is , and is 14 or less than . So is .)
“How can we check the result of our division to make sure it’s not off?” (We can multiply the result by the divisor, adding the remainder if there is one, and see if it gives the dividend.)