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The purpose of this Number Talk is for students to demonstrate strategies and understandings they have for multiplying and dividing fractions. These understandings help students develop fluency and will be helpful later in this lesson when students solve problems about multiplying and dividing fractions.
Find the value of each expression mentally.
Info Gap Tiles Cards
This Info Gap activity gives students an opportunity to determine and request the information needed to solve multi-step problems involving multiplication and division of unit fractions. In both cases, the student with the problem card needs to find out the side lengths of the area being covered and the size of the tiles. Then they can figure out how many tiles are needed. The numbers in the problems are chosen so that students can draw diagrams or perform arithmetic directly with the numbers.
This activity uses MLR4 Information Gap.
In this Info Gap activity, the first problem encourages students to think about multiplying the given fractions. The second problem involves a given area and a missing side length, which may encourage students to represent and solve the problem with a missing factor equation.
The Info Gap structure requires students to make sense of problems by determining what information is necessary, and then to ask for information they need to solve it. This may take several rounds of discussion if their first requests do not yield the information they need (MP1). It also allows them to refine the language they use and ask increasingly more precise questions until they get the information they need (MP6).
MLR4 Information Gap
Your teacher will give you either a problem card or a data card. Do not show or read your card to your partner.
Pause here so your teacher can review your work. Ask your teacher for a new set of cards and repeat the activity, trading roles with your partner.
The goal of this activity is to solve a variety of different problems, all of which can be solved by multiplying two fractions. However, the first problem may also be represented as division of a unit fraction by a whole number. The numbers are complex, making drawings an unlikely strategy to solve the problems. This encourages students to use their understanding of how to multiply fractions or divide with a whole number and a unit fraction. The Activity Synthesis focuses on why students chose multiplication or division to solve the problems.
Engagement: Provide Access by Recruiting Interest. Leverage choice around perceived challenge. Invite students to select at least 2 out of the 3 to complete within the time allowed for the activity.
Supports accessibility for: Organization, Attention
Solve each problem. Explain or show your reasoning.
Display the equations from the Warm-up:
“What relationships do you see between these problems?” (There is a 5 and a 6 in each expression. Some of the equations have multiplication and some have division. Some have a whole number value and some have a fraction.)
“Describe one relationship to your partner.”
“What do we know about the relationship between multiplication and division?” (I can sometimes find the value of a division expression using multiplication.)