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Extending multiplication and division

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visibility 52update a month agobookmarkshare

🎯 In this topic you will

  • Estimate and multiply numbers up to 100 using the 2, 3, 4, and 5 times tables.
  • Estimate and divide numbers up to 100 by 2, 3, 4, and 5.
  • Understand what a remainder means and how to interpret it in real problems.
 

🧠 Key Words

  • approach
  • interpret
Show Definitions
  • approach: A method or way of starting and solving a problem step by step.
  • interpret: To explain what results or information mean, especially in the context of a maths problem.
 

🔢 Working with Larger Numbers

I n this section, you will extend the numbers that you work with when multiplying and dividing. You will also explore what the remainder after division represents. Sometimes you will need to increase the answer by 1, depending on the problem.

 
📘 Worked example

Estimate the product of $27 \times 4$. Record the multiplication calculation in a grid and find the product.

Estimate:  $30 \times 4 = 120$

Split $27$ into $20$ and $7$, then multiply each part by $4$:

$20 \times 4 = 80$
$7 \times 4 = 28$

Add the results:  $80 + 28 = 108$

Answer:

$27 \times 4 = 108$

First, round $27$ to $30$ to estimate: $30 \times 4 = 120$.

Then use a grid method by breaking $27$ into $20$ and $7$. Multiply each part by $4$ and add the answers.

$20 \times 4 = 80$, $7 \times 4 = 28$, and $80 + 28 = 108$. This gives the exact product.

 

EXERCISES

1. Estimate the product of $23 \times 4$. Record the multiplication calculation in the grid and find the product.

👀 Show answer
Estimate: round $23$ to $20$, so $20 \times 4 = 80$.
Exact calculation: split $23$ into $20$ and $3$.
$20 \times 4 = 80$, $3 \times 4 = 12$.
$80 + 12 = 92$.
Therefore, $23 \times 4 = 92$.

2. Estimate and then find the product for each multiplication.

a. $35 \times 4 =$

b. $58 \times 3 =$

c. $94 \times 2 =$

d. $76 \times 5 =$

👀 Show answer
a. Estimate: $40 \times 4 = 160$. Exact: $35 \times 4 = 140$.
b. Estimate: $60 \times 3 = 180$. Exact: $58 \times 3 = 174$.
c. Estimate: $100 \times 2 = 200$. Exact: $94 \times 2 = 188$.
d. Estimate: $80 \times 5 = 400$. Exact: $76 \times 5 = 380$.

3. Choose a number from the table. Spin the spinner to find out whether to divide by $2$, $3$, $4$ or $5$. Remember to estimate before you calculate. Do this twice.

👀 Show answer
Example answers (your choices may differ):

First try: choose $87$, spinner shows $3$.
Estimate: $90 \div 3 = 30$. Exact: $87 \div 3 = 29$.

Second try: choose $49$, spinner shows $5$.
Estimate: $50 \div 5 = 10$. Exact: $49 \div 5 = 9$ remainder $4$.

The remainder tells you how many are left over after sharing equally.
 

🧠 Think like a Mathematician

Question: Find a number that is less than $100$ that can be divided by $2$, $3$, $4$ and $5$ with no remainder.

Method:

  1. Think about what it means for a number to be divisible by several values.
  2. Find a common multiple of $2$, $3$, $4$, and $5$.
  3. Check that your number is less than $100$.
Show Answer
  • One possible answer is $60$.
  • Explanation: $60 \div 2 = 30$, $60 \div 3 = 20$, $60 \div 4 = 15$, and $60 \div 5 = 12$ — all whole numbers.
  • So $60$ is divisible by $2$, $3$, $4$, and $5$ with no remainder, and it is less than $100$.
 

EXERCISES

4. There are $46$ tennis balls. Four tennis balls fit into each tube. How many tubes are needed for $46$ balls?

👀 Show answer
$46 \div 4 = 11$ remainder $2$. Since you cannot have part of a tube, you need $12$ tubes.

5. There are $36$ marbles in a set. Five children are playing. How many marbles do they get each?

👀 Show answer
$36 \div 5 = 7$ remainder $1$. Each child gets $7$ marbles, with $1$ marble left over.

6. Ten children can sit on each bench. How many benches are needed to seat $37$ children?

👀 Show answer
$37 \div 10 = 3$ remainder $7$. You need $4$ benches.

7. Make up a problem for these divisions.

a. $31 \div 4 = 7$ r$3$

b. $77 \div 3 = 25$ r$2$

👀 Show answer
a. Example: There are $31$ apples shared between $4$ children. Each child gets $7$ apples and $3$ apples are left.

b. Example: $77$ stickers are shared between $3$ friends. Each friend gets $25$ stickers and $2$ stickers are left over.
 

📘 What we've learned

  • We learned how to estimate and multiply numbers up to $100$ using $2$, $3$, $4$, and $5$.
  • We practiced estimating and dividing numbers up to $100$ by $2$, $3$, $4$, and $5$.
  • We used grid methods and partitioning (for example, splitting $27$ into $20$ and $7$) to find exact products.
  • We learned that division can give a remainder, written like $37 \div 10 = 3\text{ r }7$.
  • We practiced deciding when to round up in real-life problems (such as finding how many tubes or benches are needed).
  • We applied estimation to check whether our exact answers were reasonable.

Related Past Papers

Related Tutorials

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