Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a...

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Connection Night September 24, 2015

Transcript of Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a...

Page 1: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Math Connection

NightSeptember 24, 2015

Page 2: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Prior Understandings—Grades K-2

Counting numbers in a set (K)Counting by tens (K)Understanding the numbers 10, 20, 30,

40, …, 90 refer to one, two, three, four, …, nine tens (1)

Counting by fives (2)

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Page 3: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Understanding versus MemorizationChildren need to understand what it

means to multiply and divide before facts can become automatic

Understanding is necessary but not sufficient

When isolated multiplications and divisions are practiced, the emphasis is on recalling the answers

Teaching facts for automaticity relies on thinking

Page 4: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Grade Level ExpectationsBy the end of third grade students are expected to have mastered all the facts for multiplication and division within 100

By the end of fourth grade students are expected to multiply a whole number up to 4 digits by a 1-digit whole number and two 2-digit numbers

By the end of fifth grade students are expected to be fluent with multi‐digit multiplication

Page 5: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Grade 3 Introduction In Grade 3, instructional time should focus on four critical

areas: (1) developing understanding of multiplication and division and strategies for multiplication and division within 100; …

Students develop an understanding of the meanings of multiplication and division of whole numbers through activities and problems involving equal-sized groups, arrays, and area models;

Multiplication is finding an unknown product, and division is finding an unknown factor in these situations.

For equal-sized group situations, division can require finding the unknown number of groups or the unknown group size.

Students use properties of operations to calculate products of whole numbers, using increasingly sophisticated strategies based on these properties to solve multiplication and division problems involving single-digit factors.

By comparing a variety of solution strategies, students learn the relationship between multiplication and division.

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Page 6: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Common Multiplication StrategiesI can use a multiplication fact I know, to figure out one I don’t…

Using the commutative property: 2 x 4 = 4 x 2

4 groups of 2

2 groups of 4

Page 7: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Common Multiplication StrategiesDoubling: 2 x (3 x 6) = 6 x 6

3 groups of 6 doubled

Page 8: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Common Multiplication StrategiesHalving and doubling: 4 x 3 = 2 x

6

4 groups of 3 2 groups of 6

Page 9: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Common Multiplication StrategiesUsing the distributive property: 6

x 4 = (5 x 4) + (1 x 4) = 20 + 4 = 24

If you don’t know a math fact use what you

do know. 6x4--- But I do know 5x4=20 and add one more 4. This uses the

6 groups of 4.Decomposing Numbers

leads to number fluency

Page 10: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Commutative Property It is not intuitively obvious that 3 x 8 = 8 x 3.

A picture of 3 sets of 8 objects cannot immediately be seen as 8 piles of 3 objects. Eight hops of 3 land at 24, but it is not clear that 3 hops of 8 will land at 24.

The array, however, can be quite powerful in illustrating the commutative property.

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Page 11: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Part/Whole relationships

A guitar has 6 strings. How many strings are there on 3 guitars? Write a multiplication sentence to solve.

Page 12: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Common Multiplication StrategiesUsing the distributive property: 6 x 4

= (5 x 4) + (1 x 4) = 20 + 4 = 24 Number bond

Page 13: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Common Multiplication StrategiesUsing the distributive property

with tens: 9 x 4 = (10 x 4) – 4

Page 14: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

The “Place” of Place Value

4x 3 12

4 ones x 3 = 12 ones

Page 15: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

The “Place” of Place Value

40x 3 120

4 tens x 3 = 12 tens

Page 16: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Multiplying Larger Numbers4 x 13 = 4 groups of 13 or 13 groups of 4?

Page 17: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

How would you model this problem?

I am retiling my hallway. The dimensions are 4 feet by 13 feet. Each tile is one square foot. How many tiles do I need?

Page 18: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

My 4’ x 13’ hallway

Page 19: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

The Open Array

Page 20: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Distributive Property & Area Models

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3

5 + 2

15 6+

3 x 7 =3 x (5 + 2) = (3 x 5) + (3 x 2)= 15 + 6 = 21

3 x 7 =__

Page 21: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

14 x 25: An Area Model

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20 + 5

10

+

4 80 20

200 50

Page 22: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Open Array or Area Model

Open Array

20 x 10 = 20020 x 3 = 607 x 10 = 707 x 3 = 21

20 7

10 20 x 10 7 x 10

3 20 x 3 7 x 3

Page 23: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

Algebra 1: Multiplying Binomials

*Sketch is not drawn to scale.23www.JennyRay.net

x + 5

x

+

4 4x 20

x2 5x

Page 24: Math Connection Night September 24, 2015. Prior Understandings— Grades K-2 Counting numbers in a set (K) Counting by tens (K) Understanding the numbers.

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gamesFactMonster.com/math/

flashcards.htmlMultiplication.comIXL.comk-5mathteachingresources.com/