Lesson 11Dividing Numbers that Result in Decimals
Let’s find quotients that are not whole numbers.
Learning Targets:
- I can use long division to find the quotient of two whole numbers when the quotient is not a whole number.
11.1 Number Talk: Evaluating Quotients
Find the quotients mentally.
11.2 Keep Dividing
Here is how Mai used base-ten diagrams to calculate .
She started by representing 62.
She then made 5 groups, each with 1 ten. There was 1 ten left. She unbundled it into 10 ones and distributed the ones across the 5 groups.
Here is her diagram for .
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Discuss these questions with a partner and write down your answers:
- Mai should have a total of 12 ones, but her diagram shows only 10. Why?
- She did not originally have tenths, but in her diagram each group has 4 tenths. Why?
- What value has Mai found for ? Explain your reasoning.
- Find the quotient of by drawing base-ten diagrams or by using the partial quotients method. Show your reasoning. If you get stuck, work with your partner to find a solution.
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Four students share a $271 prize from a science competition. How much does each student get if the prize is shared equally? Show your reasoning.
11.3 Using Long Division to Calculate Quotients
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Here is how Lin calculated .
Discuss with your partner:
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Lin put a 0 after the remainder of 2. Why? Why does this 0 not change the value of the quotient?
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Lin subtracted 5 groups of 4 from 20. What value does the 4 in the quotient represent?
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What value did Lin find for ?
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Use long division to find the value of each expression. Then pause so your teacher can review your work.
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Use long division to show that:
- , or , is 1.25.
- , or , is 0.8.
- , or , is 0.125.
- , or , is 0.04.
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Noah said we cannot use long division to calculate because there will always be a remainder.
- What do you think Noah meant by “there will always be a remainder”?
- Do you agree with his statement? Why or why not?
Lesson 11 Summary
Dividing a whole number by another whole number does not always produce a whole-number quotient. Let’s look at , which we can think of as dividing 86 into 4 equal groups.
We can see in the base-ten diagram that there are 4 groups of 21 in 86 with 2 ones left over. To find the quotient, we need to distribute the 2 ones into the 4 groups. To do this, we can unbundle or decompose the 2 ones into 20 tenths, which enables us to put 5 tenths in each group.
Once the 20 tenths are distributed, each group will have 2 tens, 1 one, and 5 tenths, so .
We can also calculate using long division.
The calculation shows that, after removing 4 groups of 21, there are 2 ones remaining. We can continue dividing by writing a 0 to the right of the 2 and thinking of that remainder as 20 tenths, which can then be divided into 4 groups.
To show that the quotient we are working with now is in the tenth place, we put a decimal point to the right of the 1 (which is in the ones place) at the top. It may also be helpful to draw a vertical line to separate the ones and the tenths.
There are 4 groups of 5 tenths in 20 tenths, so we write 5 in the tenths place at the top. The calculation likewise shows .
Lesson 11 Practice Problems
Use long division to show that the fraction and decimal in each pair are equal.
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and 0.75
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and 0.06
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and 0.28
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Mai walked of a 30-mile walking trail. How many miles did Mai walk? Explain or show your reasoning.
Use long division to find each quotient. Write your answer as a decimal.
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To find the decimal of , Tyler reasoned: “ is equivalent to and to , so the decimal of is 0.36.”
- Use long division to show that Tyler is correct.
- Is the decimal of also 0.36? Use long division to support your answer.
Complete the calculations so that each shows the correct difference.
Use the equation and what you know about fractions, decimals, and place value to explain how to place the decimal point when you compute .