1 / 15

Third and Fourth Grade Division

Third and Fourth Grade Division. Solve Using Manipulatives. I have 15 cookies. I will give of my three friends the same amount until no cookies are left. How many cookies will each get?

aileen
Download Presentation

Third and Fourth Grade Division

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Third and Fourth GradeDivision

  2. Solve Using Manipulatives • I have 15 cookies. I will give of my three friends the same amount until no cookies are left. How many cookies will each get? • I have 18 party favors. Some friends came to my party. I gave my friends 2 favorseach until none were left. How many friends came to my party? • There are 42 crayons in a box. Each table of seven children is given a box. At the table all of the children get the same amount of crayons. How many does each get? • A section of the theater has 72 seats. Each row has 8 seats in it. How many rows are there in this section?

  3. Types of Division • There are two types of division problems: • Partitive division problems (the number of partitions is known) “Fair Share” • Measurement division problems (what is known is the measurement or how much each partition gets) “Goes Into” • How can the problems you did on the previous slide be classified? • For this long division investigation, we will focus on the “fair share” or partitive model rather than the “goes into” model.

  4. 484 ÷ 4 = 121 Sara won $484 in the lotto. She decided to give each of her four children an equal share. How much did each child get?

  5. Solve the problem 484 ÷ 4 using base-10 blocks • Represent 484 with the fewest number of base-10 blocks. • Put out one piece of paper for each group (four). • Distribute 484 evenly to each group.

  6. Solve The student store made $369 last week. Three students worked in the store and share the profit evenly. How much does each student get?

  7. Solve Three students work together to remove the seeds from a pumpkin. They removed 447 seeds from the pumpkin. How many seeds does each student get to take home and roast? What was different about this problem? What place value did you start with? Why?

  8. Solve Four students worked together to sell candy for the school fundraiser. They earned $672 from the candy sale. How much did each student earn for the fundraiser? What place value did you start with? Why?

  9. Sara won $484 in the lotto. She decided to give each of her four children an equal share. How much did each child get? 484 ÷ 4 = 121

  10. Working in groups of three to solve the problems below: One person works with the blocks One asks the questions One student keeps the record

  11. Step 3 Step 1 Step 2

  12. Division - Area Model 966 ÷ 7 is viewed as finding the unknown side length of a rectangular region with an area of 966 square units and a side length of 7 units. The amount of hundreds is found, then tens, then ones.

More Related