The purpose of this Warm-up is for students to discuss the multiplicative relationships between the place values of the digits in two numbers. This will be useful when students write multiplication and division expressions to represent place-value relationships in a later activity. While students may notice and wonder many things about these numbers, the place-value relationships between the digits in the numbers and between the numbers themselves are the important discussion points.
Launch
Groups of 2
Display the image.
“What do you notice? What do you wonder?”
1 minute: quiet think time
Activity
“Discuss your thinking with your partner.”
1 minute: partner discussion
Share and record responses.
Student Task Statement
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
8,200
820
82
8.2
0.82
0.082
Student Response
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Advancing Student Thinking
Activity Synthesis
“How does the value of 8,200 compare with the value of 820?” (It’s 10 times as much.)
“How does the value of 0.82 compare with the value of 0.082? How do you know?” (It’s also 10 times as much since there are 10 thousandths in 1 hundredth.)
The purpose of this activity is for students to express place-value relationships, using multiplication and division. Students examined decimal place values in depth in the previous unit and used the relationships between the values when they performed arithmetic with decimals. Here they focus on expressing these relationships, using multiplication and division. This will be helpful throughout the next several lessons as students examine powers of 10 and then use them for measurement conversions.
This activity uses MLR7 Compare and Connect. Advances: representing, conversing.
Launch
Groups of 2
Display the numbers: 60 and 6
“How many times the value of 6 is 60? How do you know?” (10 times, because it’s 6 tens.)
Display the equation: .
“What division equation shows that 60 is ten times the value of 6?” ( is another way of saying that 60 is ten 6s or ten times 6.)
Display the equation: .
“You are going to write equations such as these, relating different numbers.”
Activity
5 minutes: partner work time
MLR7 Compare and Connect
“Create a display that shows your equations. You may want to include details, such as notes, diagrams or drawings, to help others understand your thinking.”
Monitor for students who, during the Gallery Walk:
Identify an equation that is incorrect.
Notice place-value patterns.
2–5 minutes: independent or group work
5–7 minutes: Gallery Walk
Student Task Statement
Use these numbers and symbols to write as many true equations as you can. You may use each number and symbol more than once.
600
0.06
100
60
10
6
0.1
0.6
=
0.01
Student Response
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Advancing Student Thinking
Activity Synthesis
Invite students to share the equations they made.
Display the equation:
“How do you know this equation is true?” (When I divide tenths into 10 equal pieces, I get hundredths, so if I divide 6 tenths into 10 equal pieces, that's 6 hundredths.)
“Can you express the relationship between 0.6 and 0.06, using multiplication?” (Yes, )
Display the equation:
“How do you know this equation is true?” (I know 100 hundredths is 1, so 600 hundredths is 6.)
“Can you express the relationship between 600 and 6, using division?” (Yes, )
Invite students to describe any patterns they noticed.
Activity 2
15 mins
Describe Multiplicative Relationships
Standards Alignment
Building On
Addressing
5.NBT.A.1
Recognize that in a multi-digit number, a digit in one place represents 10 times as much as it represents in the place to its right and 1/10 of what it represents in the place to its left.
In the previous activity, students wrote multiplication and division equations, relating numbers with a single non-zero digit. The purpose of this activity is for students to focus on the same set of numbers and describe how the value of the non-zero digit changes when it moves one place to the left or to the right. This serves to highlight two important patterns that came out in some of the equations of the previous activity:
The value of a digit is multiplied by 10 when it shifts one place to the left (MP7).
The value of a digit is multiplied by 0.1 or when it shifts one place to the right (MP7).
The former idea will be further developed in the next lesson, in which students examine large numbers and exponential notation, and the latter idea will be developed when students examine conversions from a smaller metric unit to a larger metric unit.
Representation: Develop Language and Symbols. Synthesis: Make connections between representations visible, such as between information provided in the Task Statement and equations from the previous activity. Supports accessibility for: Conceptual Processing, Visual-Spatial Processing, Organization
Launch
Groups of 2
“We are going to continue to work with the numbers from the previous activity to explore more patterns.”
Activity
5 minutes: individual work time
5 minutes: partner work time
Student Task Statement
Explain or show how the value of the 6 changes in each of the numbers.
Which numbers come above 600 if the list continues? Explain your reasoning.
Which numbers come below 0.06 if the list continues? Explain your reasoning.
Activity Synthesis
“What happens to the value of the 6 when it shifts one place to the left?” (It is multiplied by 10.)
“What happens to the value of the 6 when it shifts one place to the right?” (It is multiplied by or 0.1. It is divided by 10.)
Invite students to share the numbers that they listed that come above 600 on the list.
“Do you think you can keep listing bigger and bigger numbers, with more and more zeros?” (Yes, I can always add more zeros. I don’t know. After 600,000, I don’t know if I can keep going.)
“In the next lesson, we will look at some really big numbers and how they relate to multiplying over and over by 10.”
Lesson Synthesis
“Today we looked at place values and expressed relationships between them, using multiplication and division.”
Display 0.1 and 0.01.
“What multiplication equation can I write to describe the relationship between 1 tenth and 1 hundredth?” (, )
“What division equation can I write to describe the relationship between 1 tenth and 1 hundredth?” (.)
Display 10,000 and 1,000.
“Can you also compare the values of these two numbers, using multiplication and division?” (Yes, I know and .)
“In the next several lessons, we will multiply and divide whole numbers and decimals by 10.”
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