Multiplication Part 2

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Multiplication Part 2. Common Core Leadership in Mathematics (CCLM) Monday July 9, 2012. CCLM. Homework Debrief. Share with your shoulder partner a few ideas that strike you as critical to developing a sound understanding of multiplication and division. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Multiplication Part 2

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012

MultiplicationPart 2

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics (CCLM)Monday July 9, 2012

Homework Debrief

Share with your shoulder partner a few ideas that strike you as critical to developing a sound understanding of multiplication and division.

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012

Learning Intentions

We are learning to…

• Understand how the CCSSM views the development of multiplicative thinking.

• Apply strategies that promoting fluency with single-digit multiplication.

We will be successful when we can …

• Help students apply properties of operations as strategies to multiply.

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012

Dot Images

• How many dots so you see?

• How do you see It?

• Draw what you see in your notebook.

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012

Image 2

Grounding Thinking in CCSSM

3.OA.5: Apply properties of operations as strategies to multiply and divide.

– Commutative

– Associative

– Distributive

With your shoulder partner, use an

example, remind each other how these

“rules of numbers work.”

With your shoulder partner, use an

example, remind each other how these

“rules of numbers work.”

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012

Reflect back on 3.OA.5.

Think about how the images were described.

Where do the properties show up in the reasoning?

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012

As a group, pick one card

Individually:• Quickly glance at the dot image and determine

the number of dots.

• On your white board, jot down how you saw the image using words.

• Write an equation that matches your image and your description.

• Identify the property or properties you used.

Turn and share.

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012

Image 4

Image 5

Image 6

Revisit Standard 3.OA.5 and 3.OA.7

Take turns with a Shoulder Partner to summarize:

• Reflecting on our “dot image” work, what are the main messages of these standards?

• How do dot images promote multiplicative thinking?

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012

What facts do you struggle with?

• List 3-4 multiplication facts that you have a hard time remembering.

• Think about how you find your answer or how you remember it

• Share

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012

Finding Easier Facts Inside Hard Ones

• What is your go-to strategy for helping students learn their multiplication facts?

• What is your back-up strategy when the first one fails?

• What is your back-up to the back-up?

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012

“What is a 3 by 4?”

• What is an Array?– An array is any arrangement of things in rows

and columns, such as a rectangle of square tiles or blocks

• Is there a difference?– Rows How many groups?

– Columns How many per group?

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012

3x4 and 4x3

• Build a 3 x 4 array with your tiles.

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012

Breaking Apart a 3x4 Array

• What are the ways a 3 x 4 array can be broken apart? – Split rows or columns, not individual tiles

• (3x3) + (3x1)

• (3x2) + (3x2)

• (2x4) + (1x4)

RevisitingLearning Intentions & Success Criteria

• We are learning to…– Understand how the CCSSM views the

development of multiplicative thinking.– Apply strategies that promoting fluency with

single-digit multiplication.

• We will be successful when…– We can help students apply properties of

operations as strategies to multiply.

Common Core Leadership in Mathematics ProjectUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Summer Institute 2012