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The purpose of this What Do You Know about _____? is for students to share what they know about, and how they can represent, the product . The numbers were intentionally chosen to make finding the exact value of the product challenging.
The goal of this activity is to continue to compare the size of a product of fractions to the size of the second factor. In addition to the number-line representation, with which they have worked in the last few lessons, students also see a different expression that represents the product. In the next activity, this expression will be combined with the distributive property to explain why, in all cases, multiplying a number by a fraction less than 1 results in a smaller number while multiplying by a fraction greater than 1 results in a greater number (MP8).
Match each expression to the number line that shows the same value.
The goal of this activity is to use the distributive property to explain why multiplying a number by a fraction greater than 1 increases the size of the number while multiplying by a fraction less than 1 decreases the size of the number. Expressions are particularly useful here because they show explicitly how the size of the number relates to the product. For example, writing as and then multiplying by gives: .
The revealing part of this calculation is that the structure of the right-hand side shows that it is less than , without calculating the exact value (MP7). It must be less than because it is minus some other number.
Rewrite each expression as a sum or difference of 2 products.
Write or to make the inequality true.
“Today we compared the value of a product of fractions to the value of one of the factors, without calculating the product.”
Display .
“What are some ways you can compare the value of the product with ?” (I can calculate the value, but the numbers are complicated. I can make a number-line diagram and see that it is to the left of . I can rewrite as and see that it is less than .)
“What are some ways you can compare the value of the product with ?” (I can calculate the value. I can make a number-line diagram and see that it is to the right of . I can rewrite as and see that it is greater than .)
We learned how to compare the size of a product to the sizes of its factors.
To compare with , we can put them on a number line.
The product is less than , because it is minus a fraction.