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The purpose of this Warm-up is to elicit the idea that the shape of a birdhouse can be modeled by a rectangular prism, which will be useful when students solve problems about the volumes of birdhouses in a later activity. While students may notice and wonder many things about the photograph, the shape of the birdhouse is the important discussion point.
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
The purpose of this activity is for students to estimate whole-number products in the context of volume. In the next activity, students will calculate the least and greatest volumes within the range recommended for each type of bird. The estimates here may or may not fall within the range, depending on the numbers students pick. When making reasoned estimates, there is always some compromise between accuracy and using the most friendly numbers. During the Activity Synthesis, students explain the different strategies they use to make reasonable estimates, with calculations that they can perform as simply as possible, often mentally (MP3).
Students may need a quick reminder of how to find the volume of a rectangular prism. If needed, remind students that the volume of a rectangular prism is the product of the length, the width, and the height, or alternatively, the product of the area of a base and the height for that base.
Different types of birds use different types of houses. The table gives you the recommended side lengths for birdhouses of various species.
| type of bird | side lengths of floor | height | volume estimate |
|---|---|---|---|
| chickadee | 4 in by 4 in | 6 to 10 in | |
| wood duck | 10 in by 18 in | 10 to 24 in | |
| barn owl | 10 in by 18 in | 15 to 18 in | |
| red-headed woodpecker | 6 in by 6 in | 12 to 15 in | |
| bluebird | 5 in by 5 in | 6 to 12 in | |
| swallow | 6 in by 6 in | 6 to 8 in |
Estimate a possible volume for each birdhouse.
The purpose of this activity is for students to find the range of recommended volumes for the birdhouses introduced in the first activity. This means finding the value of the products of three numbers. Students will be able to choose which two factors to multiply first and may do so strategically so they can find the value mentally. Monitor for students who change their strategy, based on the numbers they are multiplying. Also monitor for students who are using the standard algorithm to multiply three-digit numbers by two-digit numbers.
When students interpret the meanings of the products they find in the volume context, they reason abstractly and quantitatively (MP2).
| type of bird | side lengths of floor | height | range of volume |
|---|---|---|---|
| chickadee | 4 in by 4 in | 6 to 10 in | |
| wood duck | 10 in by 18 in | 10 to 24 in | |
| barn owl | 10 in by 18 in | 15 to 18 in | |
| red-headed woodpecker | 6 in by 6 in | 12 to 15 in | |
| bluebird | 5 in by 5 in | 6 to 12 in | |
| swallow | 6 in by 6 in | 6 to 8 in |
“Today we used different strategies to solve multiplication problems.”
“When is it most helpful to use the standard algorithm for multiplication?” (I like to use it when the numbers are complicated. I always like to use it because it's reliable and I know how it works.)
Display the expressions:
“Take a minute to think about which of these problems you would use the standard algorithm to solve. Then share your strategy with your partner.”
“Different problems call for different strategies, and each of us might choose a different way to solve each problem. We could use the standard algorithm to solve all the problems, but it’s not necessary.”
We learned how to find the product of a three-digit number and a two-digit number. We first represented the products with diagrams. The diagrams help us break the product into parts by place value.
Example:
This diagram breaks apart the product by place value. To find the product of , we multiply and then add all the partial products.
Then we learned a new algorithm to multiply numbers, the standard algorithm for multiplication.
Example:
Partial products are organized in a different way. 824 represents the partial product for , and 12,360 represents the partial product for .
We noticed that sometimes we need to compose a new unit when we use the standard algorithm. We represent that unit with a number over the place value to the left of the digit we are multiplying. We may have to compose more than one new unit.
The 1 above the 1 in 216 represents the ten from the product . The 2 represents 2 hundreds from the product .