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Stephanie Burton Math Learning Plan 10/30/08 Title: Long Division and the Distributive Property Grade: 5th Objectives: Students will use the distributive property to rewrite long division problems. They will model long division problems using base-10 blocks. Related SOL’s: 5.3 The student will create and solve problems involving addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division of whole numbers, using paper and pencil, estimation, mental computation, and calculators. 5.5 The student, given a dividend of four digits or fewer and a divisor of two digits or fewer, will find the quotient and remainder. Materials: Base-10 blocks for each student, small white board for each student, expo marker for each student, worksheets for each student, graph paper for each student, writing utensils Prerequisite Knowledge: previous experience using base-10 blocks, ability to divide numbers, understanding of the distributive property (official term: distributive property of multiplication over addition) Procedures: 1. Divide students into groups of 4 to 5 students. 2. Ask student groups to each define the distributive property by writing a definition of this property on their white boards. Ask them to use the distributive property to re-write 4 x (3 + 6). 3. Have a representative of each student group present their problems to the class highlighting how the property works and making sure they know that they get the same answer by computing either side of 4x(3+6) = 4x3 + 4x6. 4. Ask students how we’ve used the distributive property to solve problems in the past and ask them to show this problem with base-10 blocks. 5. Explain that we can use the distributive property to make multiplying numbers with multiple digits simpler. Solve “152 x 5 = ?” using the distributive property with the class. 6. Write “445 5 = ?” on the white board. Ask students how they would solve this problem? Ask students to solve this problem and share their answer with their groups. Pick a student to come to the white board and solve the problem. 7. Explain that you could use the distributive property to make this problem easier and simpler to solve. Emphasize that in this case they will be dividing each of the parts in the parentheses by the divisor (instead of multiplying). 8. Teacher should then solve this problem using the distributive property, and show students that they could model this problem with base -10 blocks. Compare the result to the answer they got from the traditional method in (6) above. 9. Make sure students understand this concept by solving 3 more problems in the same manner as detailed above, and modeling these problems with base-10 blocks. 10. Explain to students that they will now by responsible for completing problems on their worksheets in their student groups and modeling these problems with base10 blocks. 11. Once they have completed the worksheet, the class will play a game. They will be competing with other student groups to solve problems which the teacher writes on the board. One student from each group will go to the front of the class, while the remaining students in his/her group individually solve the problem on their white boards and model the problem with base-10 blocks. Each group in which all students correctly solve the problem, write the answer on their white boards, and correctly model the problem with base-10 blocks, will receive a point. 12. Complete as many of these problems as time permits. Evaluation: 1. During the lesson, check the base-10 representations as students work on the worksheet and evaluate each student’ progress. 2. Check students’ worksheets for accuracy in using the distributive property. 3. Evaluate student base-10 models and answers as they play the class game. *Make sure that groups are varied so that there are students of all learning levels in each group. This will ensure that students of higher learning capacities can help students that are having difficulties learning certain concepts.