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Tables, multiples and factors

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visibility 67update 3 months agobookmarkshare

🎯 In this topic you will

  • Recall and use multiplication facts for all times tables.
  • Recognise factors and find the factors of a given number.
  • Recognise multiples and find multiples of numbers.
 

🧠 Key Words

  • array
  • factor
  • inverse operations
  • multiple
  • product
Show Definitions
  • array: A way of arranging objects in equal rows and columns to represent multiplication.
  • factor: A number that divides exactly into another number with no remainder.
  • inverse operations: Operations that undo each other, such as multiplication and division.
  • multiple: A number obtained by multiplying a given number by a whole number.
  • product: The result of multiplying two or more numbers together.
 

Extending times table knowledge

In this section you will extend your knowledge of table facts to include the $7$ times table, and you will work out multiples and factors of whole numbers.

 

Sharing equally

The chocolate bar shown is made up of $28$ equal pieces. When the chocolate is shared so that everyone has the same number of pieces, both the number of people and the number of pieces each person gets must divide exactly into $28$. 

 

 

Understanding factors

The number of people sharing the chocolate and the number of pieces they each receive are both factors of $28$. Factors always come in pairs and can be used to describe all the possible ways a number can be shared equally.

 
📘 Worked example

This bar of chocolate is divided into $24$ pieces.
$4$ and $6$ are factors of $24$.
Find all the factors of $24$.

Method 1.

Draw diagrams to show all the ways you can arrange the $24$ pieces into rectangles:

$1 \times 24$
$2 \times 12$
$3 \times 8$
$4 \times 6$

Method 2.

Draw a factor bug where each pair of legs has a product of $24$.
The legs on the left-hand side show numbers in order starting from $1$.

Method 3.

Record all the multiplication facts where the product is $24$:

$1 \times 24 = 24$
$2 \times 12 = 24$
$3 \times 8 = 24$
$4 \times 6 = 24$

Answer:

The factors of $24$ are $1$, $2$, $3$, $4$, $6$, $8$, $12$, and $24$.

Factors come in pairs because two numbers multiply to give the product. By finding all pairs that multiply to $24$, you can be sure you have found every factor.

 

💡 Quick Math Tip

Finding factors: Factors always come in pairs. If one factor is small (like $1$, $2$, or $3$), the matching factor is found by dividing the number. When the pairs start repeating, you have found them all.

 

EXERCISES

1. Helga is thinking of a $2$-digit number.

She says:

It is less than $3 \times 6$

It is more than $3 \times 5$

It is not equal to $2 \times 8$

What is Helga’s number?

👀 Show answer
$3 \times 5 = 15$ and $3 \times 6 = 18$. The only $2$-digit number between them is $16$. Since $2 \times 8 = 16$, this is excluded, so there is **no possible number**.

2. Here is part of a number grid.

Which numbers are multiples of $7$?

👀 Show answer
The multiples of $7$ shown are $21$, $28$, $35$, $42$, and $49$ (where visible in the grid).

3. Copy and complete this list of factors.

The factors of $32$ are $1$, _____, _____, _____, _____, $32$.

👀 Show answer
The factors of $32$ are $1$, $2$, $4$, $8$, $16$, and $32$.

4. Bruno says, “The dates of all the Saturdays this month are $1$ less than a multiple of $7$”.

Is Bruno right?

Explain your answer.

👀 Show answer
Yes. The Saturdays fall on dates such as $6$, $13$, $20$, and $27$, which are all $1$ less than multiples of $7$.

5. Sam picks $50$ apples.

He packs all the apples into boxes.

He puts the same number of apples in each box.

How many boxes does Sam use?

Find different solutions.

👀 Show answer
Possible numbers of boxes are $1$, $2$, $5$, $10$, $25$, or $50$, depending on how many apples go in each box.

6. Here are ten digit cards.

Use each card once to make five $2$-digit numbers that are multiples of $3$.

Ask your partner to check your answers.

Did you both make the same numbers?

👀 Show answer
One possible set is $12$, $30$, $45$, $69$, and $78$. Other correct answers are possible.

7. Copy and complete the calculation so that the answer is a multiple of $8$.

$57 + \square = \square$

Can you find more than one answer?

👀 Show answer
Examples include $57 + 7 = 64$ or $57 + 15 = 72$. There are many possible answers.

8. Copy the Venn diagram and write the numbers in the correct place.

👀 Show answer
Common factors of $30$ and $40$ are $5$ and $10$. Factors of $30$ only include $3$ and $6$. Factors of $40$ only include $8$.
 

🧠 Think like a Mathematician

Here are four cards.

$3 \quad 4 \quad 5 \quad 6$

a. Place the cards in a square and multiply across the columns.

$4 \times 3 = 12$

$6 \times 5 = 30$

b. Move the cards and multiply again.

c. How many different products can you find?

You will show you are generalising when you recognise patterns in your results.

If you explain your results, you will show you are convincing.

Show Answers
  • b. By rearranging the cards, different column pairs are formed, such as $3 \times 5 = 15$ and $4 \times 6 = 24$.
  • c. Several different products are possible. The exact number depends on how the cards are paired in columns.
  • Generalisation: Changing the order of numbers changes which pairs are multiplied, but the same numbers are always used.
 

💡 Quick Math Tip

Product meaning: The product is the result of a multiplication. For example, when you multiply two numbers, the answer you get is called the product.

 

📘 What we've learned

  • We used multiplication facts to work confidently with all times tables.
  • We identified and listed factors of numbers by finding pairs that multiply to give a product.
  • We recognised multiples as numbers that can be written as $n \times \text{whole number}$.
  • We used arrays, diagrams, and multiplication facts to explain factors and multiples.
  • We applied inverse operations, showing that multiplication and division undo each other.

Related Past Papers

Related Tutorials

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