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.
This Warm-up prompts students to analyze patterns and look for structure in division expressions and equations (MP7), and to reinforce their understanding of factors and multiples. This Notice and Wonder prepares students to work with division situations that have remainders later in the lesson.
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
| division expression | multiplication equations |
|---|---|
The purpose of this activity is to introduce students to division situations that don’t have whole number quotients. Students write division situations to represent an expression. Once students generate a list of situations, students ask a question and solve one of the problems that does not involve dividing the remainders into pieces. Students create a poster of their work and do a Gallery Walk, with a focus on how each group represented the leftovers in the situation. At the end of the Activity Synthesis the term remainder is introduced to describe “leftovers” when dividing.
MLR8 Discussion Supports. To support the transfer of new vocabulary to long-term memory, invite students to chorally repeat phrases that include the word “remainder” in unison, 1–2 times.
Write division situations that the expression can represent.
The purpose of this activity is for students to use what they know about factors and multiples to determine if division expressions will have remainders. Students analyze expressions without finding the value and then choose to find the value of one expression that will result in a remainder and one without a remainder.
Engagement: Develop Effort and Persistence. Differentiate the degree of difficulty or complexity. Begin with an expression with more accessible values. For example, .“In the Lesson Synthesis, let’s represent quotients that have leftovers when we take away as many equal groups as we can from a number.”
“Today, we saw that sometimes when you divide numbers, you get a remainder.”
Display .
“How does this equation show that has a remainder?” (It shows 753 is not a multiple of 6. It also shows 6 and 125 make a factor pair for 750, and 753 is 3 more than that.)
“How can we write an equation to show that has a remainder?” ()