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The purpose of this Estimation Exploration is to estimate the product of a fraction and a large whole number. Students know how to find the exact answer, but it would require many calculations. Making an estimate will help develop a sense that because is greater than 1, the product has to be greater than the other factor. Students can make a better estimate by replacing the whole number 9,625 with a friendlier number that they can find of mentally. Throughout this lesson, students will continue to compare the size of a product to the size of one of its factors.
Record an estimate that is:
| too low | about right | too high |
|---|---|---|
The goal of this activity is for students to match expressions and diagrams and then to compare the value of each expression with one of its factors. To match the expressions with the diagrams, students likely will use the meaning of multiplication. For example, means 2 of 7 equal parts of each of 3 wholes. The area diagram shows the 7 parts, with 2 shaded, whereas the number line shows only the relative locations of and and its factor 3, requiring students to understand the relationship between and 3 in order to pick the right match. Once students have made the matches, the diagrams help them visualize that is less than 3, and the Activity Synthesis highlights this. When students match diagrams and expressions, they look for and identify structure in the number line and in area diagrams (MP7).
Match each expression to a number line and a diagram.
Write or in each blank to make the inequality true.
The purpose of this activity is for students to compare a product to an unknown factor, based on the size of the other factor. In this case, students cannot calculate the values of the products to compare but instead rely on their understanding of fractions and the meaning of multiplication. Students also use a number line to help them visualize the different distances after listing the runners in order. For this part of the activity, the expectation is that students will use what they already know about the order of the distances to determine which point corresponds to which runner. Students also might reason about the quantities. For example twice Priya’s distance can be found by marking off Priya’s position on the number line a second time (MP2).
Reading: MLR6 Three Reads. Keep books or devices closed. Display only the problem stem, without revealing the questions. “We are going to read this question 3 times.”
Which students ran farther than Priya?
Which students did not run as far as Priya?
Point P represents how far Priya ran. Find the distance of each runner on the number line. Write the runner’s initial in the blank. One runner does not have a point on the number line.
“Today we compared products, without calculating their values.”
Display: Han ran as far as Priya.
“How do you know Priya ran farther than Han?” ( of Priya‘s distance is just a fraction of her distance. It's short of the full distance Priya ran. So Priya ran farther.)
Display the image showing all runners’ distances in Activity 2 or a student-generated solution.
“How can you tell who ran farther than Priya?” (Clare and Jada are to the right of Priya on the number line, so they ran farther.)
“In the next lesson, we are going to continue to use the number line to locate and compare the values of multiplication expressions with fractions.”