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Children’s Thinking Activity Part 1. 1A. Do you see 5 boxes each with 7 turtles?. Children’s Thinking Activity 1. 1B. Do you see 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, and then 10 more?. Children’s Thinking Activity 1. 1C. Can you see 5 • 5 + 2 • 5?. Children’s Thinking Activity Part 1.
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Children’s Thinking Activity Part 1 • 1A. Do you see 5 boxes each with 7 turtles?
Children’s Thinking Activity 1 • 1B. Do you see 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, and then 10 more?
Children’s Thinking Activity 1 • 1C. • Can you see 5 • 5 + 2 • 5?
Children’s Thinking Activity Part 1 • 2A. Do you see 12 bags with 6 candies in each?
Children’s Thinking Activity Part 1 • 2B. Do you see 10 bags, with 60, and then 2 more bags 2 • 6 = 12?
Children’s Thinking Activity Part 1 • 2C Can you see 10 • 6 + 2 • 6?
What skills and concepts did these students know? • BASIC MULTIPLICATION FACTS! • And… (give examples for each)
Link the pictorial models • Suppose I want to multiply 3 • 4.
Link the pictorial models • Suppose I want to multiply 3 • 40. • This is much harder to draw, but it can be done.
40 3 Link the pictorial models • As the numbers get bigger, it is harder to draw in all the little dots. But the area model will work well: 3 • 40:
15 7 Rectangular Area Model • Let’s look a little closer: Let this be a unit square--that is, a square that measures 1 unit on each side. Then, this is a representation for 7 • 15.
10 + 5 7 70 + 35 Rectangular Area Model • Look at this more closely: • This is the same as 7 • 10 + 7 • 5
10 + 10 + 10 + 2 10 + 4 Rectangular Area Model • This idea works for more: 32 • 14
10 + 10 + 10 + 2 10 + 4 32 • 14 Do you see 4 • 2? 4 • 30? 10 • 2? 10 • 30?
Rectangular Model • You try: 46 • 23 Use the base 10 blocks or draw a picture. • Now, can you explain where these products are in the diagram? 46 • 23 = (46 • 20) + (46 • 3) or = (23 • 40) + (23 • 6)
Compare models • Can you explain how this is related to the lattice multiplication model you did for Exploration 3.13? • Can you explain how this rectangular model is related to the standard multiplication algorithm? • Can you explain how this rectangular model is related to the four students’ models?
25 • 4 + 4 • 4 Ryshawn and Nicholas 20 • 4 + 9 • 4
Multiplication-the area model • How could Jemea’s strategy be represented using the rectangular area model?
Jemea 30 • 12 - 12
Thomas 17 • 36 = ((17 • 10) • 3)+ (6 • 10) + (6 • 7)
Explain why… • Can you show, using pictures or base-10 blocks, why 3 • 14 = 14 • 3? • Can you show or explain why? Give a reason? Draw a picture? • 2 • (3 • 14) = (2 • 3) • 14? • 2 • (3 • 14) = (3 • 2) • 14? • 2 • (3 • 14) = 3 • (2 • 14) • 2 • (3 • 14) = 14 • (2 • 3) • 2 • (3 • 14) = 3 • 14 + 3 • 14 • 2 • (3 • 14) ≠ 2 • 3 + 2 • 14
Ellen begins the following problem. 46X 37 42 Is Ellen correct or incorrect? Explain why.
46 46X 37X 37 42 42 280 46X 37 2842 What is 280? Is it 7 • 4 or 7 • 40? What does the placeholder mean?
Where is the error? 46 46X 37X 37 42 42 280 46X 37 2842 What is 280? Is it 7 • 4 or 7 • 40? What does the placeholder mean?