Section B: Practice Problems Multi-digit Multiplication
Section Summary
Details
In this section, we learned to multiply factors whose products are greater than 100, using different representations and strategies to do so.
When working with multi-digit factors, it helps to decompose them by place value before multiplying. For example, to find
In both the diagram and the algorithm, the 20,000, 1,200, 160, and 8 are called the partial products. They are the result of multiplying each decomposed part of 5,342 by 4.
We can do the same to multiply a two-digit number by another two-digit number. For example, here are two ways to find
Problem 1 (Lesson 5)
Mai has a sheet of stickers with 23 rows and 8 stickers in each row.
Does Mai have more or less than 100 stickers? Explain your reasoning.
Find how many stickers Mai has. Explain or show your reasoning.
Problem 2 (Lesson 6)
Find the value of
Problem 3 (Lesson 7)
Use the diagram to find the value of
. Find the value of
.
Problem 4 (Lesson 8)
Use the diagram to find the value of
. Would this diagram be helpful to find the value of
? Explain your reasoning.
Problem 5 (Lesson 9)
The diagram and calculations show two ways for finding the value of
How does each part of the vertical calculation relate to the diagram?
Find the value of
using a method of your choice.
Problem 6 (Lesson 10)
Here is an incomplete calculation that uses partial products of
Write multiplication expressions that the numbers 15, 180, 200, and 2,400 each represent. Then, find the value of
. Find the value of the product
.
Problem 7 (Lesson 11)
Here is how Elena calculated the value of
Where does the 9 in Elena’s calculation come from? What about the 6?
Where do the 2 and the 1 in calculation come from?
Use Elena’s method to find the value of
.
Problem 8 (Lesson 12)
There are 4,218 students in school district A. School district B has 3 times as many students as school district A. How many students are in school district B? Explain or show your reasoning.
Problem 9 (Exploration)
Clare was double checking her answers for some products. Without doing the computation again, she knew that these answers were incorrect. How might Clare have known?
Problem 10 (Exploration)
Here is Mai’s strategy to find the value of
Explain why Mai’s method works.
Use Mai’s method to find the value of
. Find the value of
using a strategy you learned. How is Mai’s method like yours? How is it different than yours?