Unit 6 Multiplying And Dividing Multi Digit Numbers — Unit Plan
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Lesson 1 Patterns that Grow | — | Andre's House Pattern (1 problem) Andre used pattern blocks to make houses in a pattern. For each new step, he adds a new “floor” made of squares. The triangles are used for the roof of the house.
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Lesson 2 Patterns that Repeat | — | Diego’s Repeating Shapes (1 problem) Diego created a repeating pattern with shapes. He repeats “4 squares, then a circle.”
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Lesson 3 Numerical Patterns | — | Add 8 (1 problem)
Kiran created a number pattern that follows the rule “start with 0, keep adding 8.”
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Lesson 4 More Numerical Patterns | — | Double 100 (1 problem)
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Section A Check Section A Checkpoint | Problem 1 Here are the first two steps of a pattern of squares that look like + symbols. At each step, 4 squares are added.
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Problem 2 The rule for a pattern is “start with 12, keep adding 12.”
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Lesson 5 Products Beyond 100 | — | Rows of Seats (1 problem) A theater has 8 rows of seats and 27 seats in each row. How many seats are in the theater? Show your reasoning. Show Solution216 seats. Sample responses:
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Lesson 6 Multiply Two-Digit Numbers and One-Digit Numbers | — | Represent the Product (1 problem) Find the value of 6×83. Use a diagram if it is helpful. Show SolutionSample response:
6×80=480 | ||||||||||||
Lesson 7 Multiply Three- and Four-Digit Numbers by One-Digit Numbers | — | The Value of the Product (1 problem) Find the value of 6×218. Show your thinking using diagrams, symbols, or other representations. Show Solution1,308. Sample response: (6×200)+(6×10)+(6×8)=1,200+60+48=1,308 | ||||||||||||
Lesson 8 Multiply 2 Two-Digit Numbers | — | What’s the Product? (1 problem) Find the value of 24×17. Explain or show your reasoning. Use a diagram if it is helpful. Show Solution408. Sample response: 200+140+40+28=408 | ||||||||||||
Lesson 9 Recording Partial Products: One-Digit and Three- or Four-Digit Factors | — | Partial Products (1 problem) Find the value of 5×1,023. Show your thinking using diagrams, symbols, or other representations. Show Solution5,115. Sample responses:
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Lesson 10 Using Algorithms with Partial Products: 2 Two-Digit Numbers | — | Choose Your Own Strategy (1 problem) Find the value of 15×43. Show your reasoning. Show Solution645. Sample responses: 15×40+15×3=600+45=645 | ||||||||||||
Lesson 11 Partial Products and the Standard Algorithm | — | Choose a Way to Multiply (1 problem) Find the value of each product. Explain or show your reasoning.
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Lesson 12 Solve Problems Involving Multiplication | — | Leap Year (1 problem) In a leap year, the month of February has 29 days. How many hours are in that month? Explain or show your reasoning. Show Solution696 hours. Sample response: | ||||||||||||
Section B Check Section B Checkpoint | Problem 1 Find the value of 18×7. Explain or show your reasoning. Show Solution18×7=126. Sample response: 70+56=126 Problem 2 Find the value of 27×36. Explain or show your reasoning. Show Solution972. Sample response: 600+120+210+42=972 Problem 3 Here is Noah’s work finding the value of 92×78. Do you agree with Noah’s work? Explain or show your reasoning.
Show SolutionI disagree with Noah. Sample response: He multiplied 2 and 90 by 7 instead of by 70. Those partial products should be 10 times as much, 140 and 6,300 instead of 14 and 630. | |||||||||||||
Lesson 13 Situations Involving Equal-Size Groups | — | Cleaning Desks (1 problem) A group of students are cleaning 96 desks after an art project. If 6 students each clean the same number of desks, how many desks does each student clean? Explain or show your reasoning. Show SolutionEach student cleans 16 desks. Sample responses:
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Lesson 14 Situations Involving Area | — | Sticky Notes on the Door (1 problem) Jada’s class is decorating their door with square sticky notes for their teacher. Each sticky note has a drawing or a message from a student. The class used 234 square sticky notes to cover their classroom door completely, leaving no gaps or overlaps between the notes. It takes 9 square notes to cover the width of the door. How many square notes does it take to cover the full height of the door? Show how you know. Show Solution26 square notes. Sample response: I know that 9×20=180 and 9×6=54. 180+54=234, so it takes 20+6 or 26 notes to cover the height of the door. | ||||||||||||
Lesson 15 Base-Ten Blocks to Divide | — | Division Reflection (1 problem) How was using the base-ten blocks helpful in your work today? How was it not helpful? Show SolutionSample response: It was helpful when we were working with smaller numbers and we didn’t have to decompose blocks. It wasn’t helpful when I was trying to work with larger numbers. | ||||||||||||
Lesson 16 Base-Ten Diagrams to Represent Division | — | Find the Value of a Quotient (1 problem) Find the value of 132÷4. Show your thinking using diagrams, symbols, or other representations. The base-ten diagram represents 132. Use the diagram if you find it helpful. Show Solution33. Sample responses:
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Lesson 17 An Algorithm with Partial Quotients | — | Subtract Groups (1 problem) What is the value of 430÷5? Explain or show your reasoning. Show Solution86. Sample responses: 400 is 80 groups of 5 and 30 is 6 groups of 5. Adding the groups of 5—80 and 6—gives the quotient. \begin{align} 400\div 5&= 80\\ 30 \div 5 &= 6\\ \overline {\hspace{5mm}430 \div 5} &\overline{\hspace{1mm}= 86\phantom{000000}}\end{align} | ||||||||||||
Lesson 18 Use an Algorithm with Partial Quotients | — | Find a Quotient (1 problem) Find the value of 2,023÷7. Use partial quotients to show your reasoning. Show Solution289. Sample response: partial quotients 200, 80, 9 | ||||||||||||
Lesson 19 Divide with Remainders | — | Remainders (1 problem) Find the value of 1,865÷4. How many are left over? Use partial quotients to show your reasoning. Show Solution466 groups with a remainder of 1. Sample response: | ||||||||||||
Lesson 20 Interpret Remainders in Division Situations | — | Miscounting? (1 problem) Mai is reciting multiples of 6. The last number she calls out is 194. Clare says, “I think you may have made a mistake.” Do you agree with Clare? Explain or show your reasoning. Show SolutionYes, I agree with Clare. Sample responses:
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Lesson 21 Problems with Remainders | — | Reaching 161 with Multiples (1 problem) Mai is writing multiples of 7. Mai wonders whether she will say the number 149. Do you think she will? Explain or show your reasoning. Show SolutionShe will not. Sample response: 140 is a multiple of 7 because 7×2=14. So, 7×20=140. 149 is the same as 140+9, so there would be a remainder of 2. | ||||||||||||
Section C Check Section C Checkpoint | Problem 1 A rectangular wall that is 8 feet tall is covered with 296 square feet of wallpaper. How many feet long is the wall? Explain or show your reasoning. Use a diagram if it is helpful. Show Solution37 feet. Sample responses: 80+80+80+56=296 and 10+10+10+7=37 \begin{align} 240\div 8&= 30\\ 56\div 8 &= \phantom{0}7\\ \overline {\hspace{5mm}296 \div 8} &\overline{\hspace{1mm}= 37 \phantom{000}}\end{align} Problem 2 Find the value of 1,925÷7 using an algorithm that uses partial quotients. Show Solution275. Sample response: Problem 3 Mai is putting together a photo album. She has 229 photos. Each page can hold 9 photos. How many pages of the photo album does Mai need for all the photos? Explain or show your reasoning. Show Solution26 pages. Sample response: 229 divided by 9 gives 25 with a remainder of 4. This means that 25 pages will be full and there will be 1 page with only 4 photos. | |||||||||||||
Lesson 22 Different Ways to Solve Problems | — | Big Weekend at the Movies (1 problem) A one-room movie theater has 278 seats. Its goal is to sell 2,600 tickets every weekend. The theater plays a movie 5 times each Saturday and 4 times each Sunday. Last weekend, the movie theater was completely full for every movie played on Saturday and Sunday. Did the movie theater meet its goal? Show SolutionNo, the goal was not met. A ticket was sold for each seat 5 times on Saturday, and 4 times on Sunday: 278×5=1,390 and 278×4=1,112, and 1,390+1,112=2,502. The goal was not met because 2,502 is less than 2,600. | ||||||||||||
Lesson 23 Problems about Perimeter and Area | — | Paper for a Banner (1 problem) Han has a rectangular piece of paper that is 96 inches by 36 inches. He is using it to create a banner for Awards Day. Last year the banner measured 2,304 square inches.
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Lesson 24 Solve Problems with Many Operations | — | Long-distance Driving (1 problem) A truck driver needs to deliver goods to a city that is 2,654 km away.
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Lesson 25 Assess the Reasonableness of Solutions | — | The Children and the Elderly (1 problem) Here are the data on the numbers of children and senior citizens in Philadelphia as of 2017.
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Lesson 26 Paper Flower Decorations | — | No cool-down | ||||||||||||
Section D Check Section D Checkpoint | Problem 1 A rectangular garden is 11 yards long and 9 feet wide. How many square feet is the area of the garden? Explain or show your reasoning. Show Solution297 square feet. Sample response: I know that 11 yards is 33 feet so the area is 9×33 feet. I know 9×3=27 and 9×30=270 and 27+270=297. Problem 2 Tyler scored 126 points in 9 basketball games.
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Unit 6 Assessment End-of-Unit Assessment | ||||||||||||||