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This Number Talk encourages students to think flexibly about numbers to divide. The understandings elicited here will be helpful throughout this unit as students divide whole numbers and build toward fluent multiplication and division.
Find the value of each expression mentally.
In this activity, students are given three situations and asked to determine which situations are true and which are not. To do so, they need to carefully make sense of the quantities in each story and how they are related (MP2). Students may explain why a situation is true by writing one or more expressions or equations to represent the relationships and perform the calculations to check. Students also may reason, using estimation and mental computation when explaining why a situation must be false.
Here are 3 situations. Which situations are true? Which situations are not true?
Show how you know.
In this activity, students interpret situations that involve equal groups and require making sense of a remainder. Students solve problems, using their understanding of multiplication, and by connecting their solutions to the quantities in the situation (MP2). Although parts of the task could be solved by dividing a multi-digit number by a two-digit number, students are not expected to perform division with these numbers until grade 5. Students may access this task, using multiplication and addition.
Encourage students to use the Three Reads routine as needed to solve problems.
A school is taking everyone on a field trip. It needs buses to transport 375 people.
Bus Company A has small buses with 27 seats in each.
Bus Company B has large buses with 48 seats in each.
What is the least number of buses that will be needed if the school goes with:
Bus Company C has large buses that can take up to 72 passengers.
Diego says, “If the school chooses Bus Company C, it will need only 6 buses, but the buses will have more empty seats.”
Do you agree? Explain your reasoning.
“Today we analyzed and solved many kinds of word problems.“
“What are some strategies we should use when solving problems to make sure we understand what the problem is asking?” (Read it carefully, think about what the numbers tell us and how they are related to each other.)
“What are some ways to figure out the relationships between the numbers?” (Create a representation—an equation or a diagram—and check to see if the representation matches the problem being solved.)
“How would we know if our answer makes sense?” (Check to see if it’s reasonable in the situation, double check our calculations, check to see if it answers the question.)