Lesson 2

Productos parciales en diagramas

Warm-up: Cuál es diferente: Diagramas para encontrar productos (10 minutes)

Narrative

The purpose of this warm-up is for students to compare and contrast different diagrams that can be used to represent and calculate products of two-digit numbers. Students used these partial products diagrams in Grade 4. They will extend them to represent the product of a three-digit number and a two-digit number later in the lesson.

These rectangular diagrams use the intuition and properties of area to support representing multiplication. But, a genuine area diagram would be difficult to read, so the individual pieces are not drawn to scale.

Launch

  • Groups of 2
  • Display the image.
  • “Escojan uno que sea diferente. Prepárense para compartir por qué es diferente” // “Pick one that doesn’t belong. Be ready to share why it doesn’t belong.”
  • 1 minute: quiet think time

Activity

  • “Discutan con su compañero lo que pensaron” // “Discuss your thinking with your partner.”
  • 2–3 minutes: partner discussion
  • Share and record responses.

Student Facing

¿Cuál es diferente?

ADiagram, rectangle partitioned horizontally into 2 rectangles.

BDiagram, rectangle partitioned vertically and horizontally into 4 rectangles.

CDiagram, rectangle partitioned vertically and horizontally into 4 rectangles.

DDiagram, rectangle partitioned vertically into 2 rectangles. 

Student Response

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Activity Synthesis

  • “¿Cómo nos puede ayudar el diagrama C a calcular el producto \(42 \times 33\)?” // “How might Diagram C be helpful for calculating the product \(42 \times 33\)?” (I can add those numbers to get the value of \(42 \times 33\).)
  • Highlight that this is the type of diagram that will be used throughout the next several lessons. The purpose of the diagram is to help see different ways to calculate products of numbers.

Activity 1: Descompongamos de muchas formas (15 minutes)

Narrative

The purpose of this activity is for students to use a diagram to help calculate the product of a three-digit number and a two-digit number. The diagram helps to organize the individual products that can be used to find the larger product. During the activity synthesis, students connect the diagram to the distributive property when they explain how the sum of the individual products gives the larger product (MP7).

MLR8 Discussion Supports. For each observation that is shared, invite students to turn to a partner and restate what they heard using precise mathematical language.
Advances: Listening, Speaking

Launch

  • Groups of 2
  • Display the image from the student workbook.
  • “En estos problemas, dentro de cada región del diagrama, escriban el producto representado por esa región” // “In these problems, write each product inside the part of the diagram that represents that product.”
  • Demonstrate by writing 1,200 inside the rectangle with sides marked 30 and 40.

Activity

  • 1–2 minutes: quiet think time
  • 6–8 minutes: partner work time
  • Monitor for students who use their work for the first product to find the second product.

Student Facing

Diagram, rectangle partitioned vertically and horizontally into 4 rectangles.
  1. Escribe dentro de cada rectángulo el valor de cada producto.
  2. Encuentra el valor de \(42 \times 33\).
  3. Este diagrama representa \(142 \times 33\).
    Diagram, rectangle partitioned vertically and horizontally into 6 rectangles.
    Escribe dentro de cada rectángulo el valor de cada producto.
  4. Encuentra el valor de \(142 \times 33\).

Student Response

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Activity Synthesis

  • Invite students to share their work for finding the product \(42 \times 33\).
  • Display: \(42 \times 33 = (40 + 2) \times (30 + 3)\)
  • “¿Cómo se representa la ecuación con este diagrama?” // “How does the diagram represent this equation?” (It shows 42 broken up into 40 and 2 and 33 broken up into 30 and 3.)
  • Display: \((40 + 2) \times (30 + 3) =\) \((40 \times 30) + (2 \times 30) + (40 \times 3) + (2 \times 3)\)
  • “¿Cómo saben que esta ecuación es verdadera?” // “How do you know this equation is true?” (The diagram shows \(42 \times 33\) broken up into those 4 partial products.)
  • “¿Qué relación hay entre encontrar el producto \(142 \times 33\) y encontrar el producto \(42 \times 33\)?” // “How is finding the product \(142 \times 33\) related to finding the product \(42 \times 33\)?” (The products and partial products are the same, except that I also have \(100 \times 33\) in \(142 \times 33\).)

Activity 2: Calculemos de muchas formas (20 minutes)

Narrative

The purpose of this activity is for students to write expressions to represent different ways to decompose a product. Then they choose one of the decompositions to find the product. Students consider how certain decompositions are more helpful than others, depending on the specific numbers in the problem. The diagrams used here relate to the partial products and standard algorithm methods which students will learn in future lessons.

Engagement: Provide Access by Recruiting Interest. Provide choice. Invite students to decide which problem to start with and how they want to write the expressions.
Supports accessibility for: Attention

Launch

  • Groups of 2
  • Give students time to read the task statement.
  • “Ahora van a escribir una expresión en cada parte del diagrama, en vez de escribir un número” // “This time, you will write an expression in each piece of the diagram, rather than a number.”

Activity

  • 1 minute: independent think time
  • 7–8 minutes: partner work time
  • Monitor for students who:
    • use the first diagram to help calculate the values for the other two diagrams.
    • choose different diagrams for their calculations.

Student Facing

Todos estos diagramas representan \(315 \times 24\). En cada uno, escribe una expresión de multiplicación dentro de cada rectángulo que represente el producto.

  1.  
    Diagram, rectangle partitioned vertically and horizontally into 6 rectangles.
  2.  
    Diagram, rectangle partitioned horizontally into 2 rectangles.
  3.  
    Diagram, rectangle partitioned vertically into 3 rectangles.
  4. Usa uno de los diagramas para encontrar el valor de \(315 \times 24\).
  5. Explica por qué escogiste ese diagrama para encontrar el producto.

Student Response

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Advancing Student Thinking

If students do not write the correct partial product in the diagram, ask, “¿Cuál sería una estimación razonable del producto \(315 \times 24\)?” // “What is a reasonable estimate for the product of \(315 \times 24\)?”

Activity Synthesis

  • Display:
    \(20 \times 300\)
  • “¿Cómo se relaciona esta expresión con el producto \(315 \times 24\)?” // “How does this expression relate to the product \(315 \times 24\)?” (It represents one of the products in the first diagram.)
  • “¿Por qué esta expresión no está escrita en ninguno de los otros diagramas?” // “Why isn’t this expression written in any of the other diagrams?” (Because the other diagrams are decomposed differently.)
  • Invite students to share the diagram they chose to find the product and how it was helpful. As students share, record equations to represent each partial product.
  • “¿Cuáles son las ventajas y desventajas de esta forma de calcular \(315 \times 24\)?” // “What are the advantages or disadvantages of this way to calculate \(315 \times 24\)?” (For full partial products, each product is simple to calculate. I do have 6 different numbers to add up at the end. When I broke the full product into two products, the calculations I used to find each product were harder, but once I had them, there were only two things to add. When I broke the full product into 3 products, this was a good compromise. The products were not too hard to calculate and there were just 3 of them to add.)

Lesson Synthesis

Lesson Synthesis

“Hoy multiplicamos números y pensamos en cómo nos pueden ayudar los diagramas” // “Today we multiplied numbers and thought about how diagrams could help.”

Display the first image from the last activity.

“¿Cómo nos puede ayudar el diagrama a encontrar el valor del producto \(315 \times 24\)?” // “How can the diagram help us find the value of the product \(315 \times 24\)?” (It helps me break up the product by place value. I take the hundreds, tens, and ones of one number and multiply them by the tens and ones of the other number.)

“Mañana vamos a trabajar con productos parciales y a organizarlos de otra forma” // “Tomorrow we are going to work with partial products and organize them in a different way.”

Cool-down: $222 \times 14$ (5 minutes)

Cool-Down

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