In this Warm-up, students practice estimating a reasonable answer, using known information, rounding, and multiplicative reasoning strategies. For example, students may create a diagram and arrive at as an estimate of the number of fish. Then they may approximate with , or estimate with or . Some students may notice that the question is vague and ask: “How many are going to the park?” rather than “How many people are going to the park?” and account only for the number of children and teachers in their estimation. If students ask for clarification, ask them to make their own assumptions and explain why they made those assumptions when they share their estimates.
“What is an estimate that’s too high? Too low? About right?”
2 minutes: quiet think time
1 minute: partner discussion
Record responses.
Seven teachers go to the park.
Each teacher takes 7 students.
Each student brings 7 fishbowls.
Each fishbowl has 7 fish.
How many go to the park?
Record an estimate that is:
too low
about right
too high
Student Response
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Advancing Student Thinking
Activity Synthesis
Consider asking:
“Is anyone’s estimate less than 500? Greater than 5,000?”
“Did anyone include the number of teachers and students in their estimate?”
Invite students to share their estimation strategies. After each explanation, ask if others reasoned the same way.
Consider revealing the actual value of 2,457 teachers, students, and fish.
Activity 1
Standards Alignment
Building On
Addressing
4.NBT.B.5
Multiply a whole number of up to four digits by a one-digit whole number, and multiply two two-digit numbers, using strategies based on place value and the properties of operations. Illustrate and explain the calculation by using equations, rectangular arrays, and/or area models.
In this activity, students revisit two algorithms for multiplying numbers. They recall that in the standard algorithm, the digit in one factor is multiplied by each digit in the other factor, but the partial products are not recorded on separate lines. Rather, the standard algorithm condenses multiple partial products into a single product.
MLR8 Discussion Supports. Synthesis: For each strategy that is shared, invite students to turn to a partner and restate what they heard, using precise mathematical language. Advances: Listening, Speaking
Representation: Develop Language and Symbols. Activate or supply background knowledge. Display , without the solutions. Ask students to tell you what each digit in 416 represents (for example, the 1 represents 10). Supports accessibility for: Conceptual Processing, Memory, Language
Launch
Groups of 2
Give students access to grid paper, if needed, for aligning the digits in a multiplication algorithm.
Activity
2 minutes: independent work time
Pause to discuss the first set of questions. Display the two algorithms in the first question. Ask students to share responses.
“How are the two algorithms alike? How are they different?”
Highlight students' responses to emphasize:
In Method A, each partial product is listed separately before being added at the end.
In Method B, only one digit is recorded at a time. The values for any place value unit are added and only one digit is recorded. Any new units are recorded in the next highest place.
6–10 minutes: independent work time
2–4 minutes: partner discussion
We used 2 different ways to multiply numbers earlier in the school year.
A
B
In Method A, where do the 12, 20, and 800 come from?
In Method B, where does the 1 above 416 come from?
Diego uses both methods to find the value of . He has a different result for each method.
Can you tell which method shows the correct product, without using calculations? How do you know the other product is not correct?
For the incorrect result, explain what is correct and what is incorrect in Diego's steps. Then show the correct calculation, using Method B.
Use either method to find the value of each product. Show your reasoning.
Activity Synthesis
Select students to share their responses to the second set of questions.
If not mentioned in students’ explanations, highlight that:
The result of is 15, a two-digit number, so 10 of the 15 ones are composed as 1 ten above the tens place and added to the 3 tens that result from .
1 ten and 3 tens make 4 tens.
Poll the class on whether their preferred method is A, B, or dependent on the problem. Select a student from each camp to explain their reason.
Activity 2
Standards Alignment
Building On
Addressing
4.NBT.B.5
Multiply a whole number of up to four digits by a one-digit whole number, and multiply two two-digit numbers, using strategies based on place value and the properties of operations. Illustrate and explain the calculation by using equations, rectangular arrays, and/or area models.
Earlier, students compared and made connections between two algorithms for multiplying a multi-digit number and a single-digit number. In this activity, students compare an algorithm that uses partial products with the standard algorithm for multiplying 2 two-digit numbers. As students analyze and critique each method, they practice looking for and making use of the base-ten structure of whole numbers (MP7).
Launch
Groups of 2
Access to grid paper, in case needed to align digits when multiplying
Activity
3–4 minutes: independent work time on the first two problems
1–2 minutes: partner discussion
Monitor for students who can explain the numbers in the standard algorithm.
5 minutes: independent work time on the remaining questions
Here are 2 ways to find the value of .
A
B
In Method A, where do the 4, 30, 80, and 600 come from?
In Method B, which 2 numbers are multiplied to get these products.
34
680
Use the 2 methods to show that each equation is true.
a.
b.
Student Response
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Advancing Student Thinking
Activity Synthesis
Invite students to share how they used each method to show that and .
Lesson Synthesis
“Today we looked at several methods for multiplying a multi-digit number by a single-digit number and also for multiplying 2 two-digit numbers.“
Display:
“Here are some reasoning or calculation strategies we have seen for multiplying 2 two-digit numbers.”
“What connections do you see among these strategies? Point out as many as you can.”
“Which of these strategies makes the most sense or is clearest to you?”
Standards Alignment
Building On
Addressing
4.NBT.B.5
Multiply a whole number of up to four digits by a one-digit whole number, and multiply two two-digit numbers, using strategies based on place value and the properties of operations. Illustrate and explain the calculation by using equations, rectangular arrays, and/or area models.