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Playing with multiplication and division

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visibility 45update a month agobookmarkshare

🎯 In this topic you will

  • Multiply numbers in any order.
  • Multiply numbers up to 20 by 2, 3, 4, or 5.
  • Record what is left over after division (remainders).
 

🧠 Key Words

  • distributive
  • quotient
  • remainder
  • simplify
Show Definitions
  • distributive: A rule that lets you multiply or divide across brackets, such as breaking one calculation into smaller parts.
  • quotient: The answer you get when one number is divided by another.
  • remainder: The amount left over after a division that does not divide evenly.
  • simplify: To make a calculation or expression easier by reducing it to its simplest form.
 

🔄 Changing Order in Calculations

M ultiplication is commutative, just like addition. This means you can multiply numbers in any order, so you can rearrange a calculation to make it easier. Division sometimes leaves part of the whole left over. You will learn how to show this in your calculation.

 

EXERCISES

1. Multiply each set of three numbers in any order to simplify the calculation and find the product.

a. $5 \times 4 \times 3$

b. $6 \times 5 \times 3$

c. $6 \times 4 \times 2$

d. $8 \times 3 \times 2$

👀 Show answer

a) $5 \times 4 \times 3 = 20 \times 3 = 60$

b) $6 \times 5 \times 3 = 30 \times 3 = 90$

c) $6 \times 4 \times 2 = 24 \times 2 = 48$

d) $8 \times 3 \times 2 = 24 \times 2 = 48$

2. Choose one of the sets of numbers from question $1$. Simplify the calculation in a different way to check that the product is the same.

👀 Show answer

Example using part d:

$8 \times 3 \times 2 = 8 \times 6 = 48$

This matches the previous result, so the product is still $48$.

 
📘 Worked example

Simplify this multiplication to help you find the product.

$16 \times 4$

Answer:

a. $16 \times 4 = (10 \times 4) + (6 \times 4)$

  $= 40 + 24$

  $= 64$

b. $16 \times 4 = (8 \times 4) + (8 \times 4)$

  $= 32 + 32$

  $= 64$

Marcus: I split $16$ into $10$ and $6$. I multiplied each number by $4$, then added them together: $40 + 24 = 64$.

Arun: I split $16$ into $8$ and $8$. I only needed to multiply by $4$ once because they are the same. I doubled $32$ to get $64$.

 

EXERCISES

3. Simplify each multiplication to help you find the product.

a. $13 \times 4 =$

b. $18 \times 5 =$

c. $12 \times 2 =$

d. $15 \times 3 =$

👀 Show answer

a) $13 \times 4 = 52$

b) $18 \times 5 = 90$

c) $12 \times 2 = 24$

d) $15 \times 3 = 45$

4. Complete each division. Make sure that you include any remainders.

a. $28 \div 4 =$

b. $25 \div 2 =$

c. $53 \div 5 =$

d. $32 \div 4 =$

e. $10 \div 4 =$

f. $46 \div 3 =$

👀 Show answer

a) $28 \div 4 = 7$

b) $25 \div 2 = 12\text{ r }1$

c) $53 \div 5 = 10\text{ r }3$

d) $32 \div 4 = 8$

e) $10 \div 4 = 2\text{ r }2$

f) $46 \div 3 = 15\text{ r }1$

5. Four children share a bag of $30$ sweets between them equally. How many sweets does each child get? Write the division calculation that shows the result.

👀 Show answer

$30 \div 4 = 7\text{ r }2$

Each child gets $7$ sweets, with $2$ left over.

🧠 Think like a Mathematician

Challenge: Find a number between $10$ and $20$ that always leaves a remainder when you divide by $2$, $3$, $4$, and $5$.

Method:

  1. List the numbers from $11$ to $19$.
  2. Test each number by dividing it by $2$, $3$, $4$, and $5$.
  3. Remove any number that divides exactly (with no remainder).
  4. Keep the numbers that leave a remainder every time.

Follow-up Questions:

1. Which numbers satisfy the condition?
2. Why do these numbers work?
3. Can there be more than one correct answer?
👀 show answer
  • 1. The numbers are $11$, $13$, $17$, and $19$.
  • 2. None of these numbers are divisible by $2$, $3$, $4$, or $5$, so each division leaves a remainder.
  • 3. Yes — there is more than one correct answer because several numbers in this range are not multiples of $2$, $3$, $4$, or $5$.
 

📘 What we've learned

  • We learned that multiplication can be done in any order (the commutative property).
  • We practised multiplying numbers up to $20$ by $2$, $3$, $4$, and $5$.
  • We simplified multiplications by splitting numbers, for example $16 \times 4 = (10 \times 4) + (6 \times 4)$.
  • We learned how to divide numbers and record remainders using the form $a \div b = q \text{ r } r$.
  • We applied division to real situations, such as sharing equally and finding what is left over.

Related Past Papers

Related Tutorials

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