Learn on PengiIllustrative Mathematics, Grade 5Chapter 4: Wrapping Up Multiplication and Division with Multi-Digit Numbers

Lesson 5: Build Multiplication Fluency

In this Grade 5 Illustrative Mathematics lesson, students build fluency with the standard algorithm for multiplying two-digit and three-digit whole numbers, including problems that require composing multiple new units. Students explore different ways to apply the algorithm and practice placing digits strategically to maximize products, deepening their understanding of place value. The lesson addresses standard 5.NBT.B.5 within Chapter 4 on multi-digit multiplication and division.

Section 1

Calculate Partial Products

Property

The partial products algorithm uses the distributive property to solve multiplication.
A multi-digit number is broken into the sum of its place values (expanded form), and each part is multiplied separately before adding the results.

a×(b+c+d)=(a×b)+(a×c)+(a×d)a \times (b + c + d) = (a \times b) + (a \times c) + (a \times d)

Each partial product can be represented as a section of an array, showing how the total product is composed of smaller, manageable parts.

Examples

Section 2

The Standard Algorithm for Multiplication

Property

The standard algorithm for multiplication is a procedure for multiplying numbers by breaking the problem into partial products.

You multiply the top factor by each digit of the bottom factor, one at a time from right to left, and then add the resulting partial products together.

Section 3

Multiplying 2-Digit Numbers Using the Standard Algorithm

Property

To multiply two-digit numbers, calculate two partial products.
The first is the top number multiplied by the ones digit of the bottom number.
The second is the top number multiplied by the tens digit of the bottom number, with a zero placed in the ones place to account for place value.
The final product is the sum of these two partial products.

Examples

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Chapter 4: Wrapping Up Multiplication and Division with Multi-Digit Numbers

  1. Lesson 1

    Lesson 1: Estimate and Find Products

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: Partial Products: Diagrams and Algorithms

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Standard Algorithm: Introduction and Practice

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: Standard Algorithm: Multi-digit Numbers with Composing

  5. Lesson 5Current

    Lesson 5: Build Multiplication Fluency

  6. Lesson 6

    Lesson 6: The Birds

  7. Lesson 7

    Lesson 7: World's Record Folk Dance

  8. Lesson 8

    Lesson 8: Partial Quotients: Strategy and Algorithm

  9. Lesson 9

    Lesson 9: Practice Division with Partial Quotients

  10. Lesson 10

    Lesson 10: Find Missing Side Lengths

  11. Lesson 11

    Lesson 11: World's Record Noodle Soup

  12. Lesson 12

    Lesson 12: Fractions as Partial Quotients (Optional)

  13. Lesson 13

    Lesson 13: Lots of Milk

  14. Lesson 14

    Lesson 14: Real-World Applications: Trash Problems

Lesson overview

Expand to review the lesson summary and core properties.

Expand

Section 1

Calculate Partial Products

Property

The partial products algorithm uses the distributive property to solve multiplication.
A multi-digit number is broken into the sum of its place values (expanded form), and each part is multiplied separately before adding the results.

a×(b+c+d)=(a×b)+(a×c)+(a×d)a \times (b + c + d) = (a \times b) + (a \times c) + (a \times d)

Each partial product can be represented as a section of an array, showing how the total product is composed of smaller, manageable parts.

Examples

Section 2

The Standard Algorithm for Multiplication

Property

The standard algorithm for multiplication is a procedure for multiplying numbers by breaking the problem into partial products.

You multiply the top factor by each digit of the bottom factor, one at a time from right to left, and then add the resulting partial products together.

Section 3

Multiplying 2-Digit Numbers Using the Standard Algorithm

Property

To multiply two-digit numbers, calculate two partial products.
The first is the top number multiplied by the ones digit of the bottom number.
The second is the top number multiplied by the tens digit of the bottom number, with a zero placed in the ones place to account for place value.
The final product is the sum of these two partial products.

Examples

Book overview

Jump across lessons in the current chapter without opening the full course modal.

Continue this chapter

Chapter 4: Wrapping Up Multiplication and Division with Multi-Digit Numbers

  1. Lesson 1

    Lesson 1: Estimate and Find Products

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: Partial Products: Diagrams and Algorithms

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Standard Algorithm: Introduction and Practice

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: Standard Algorithm: Multi-digit Numbers with Composing

  5. Lesson 5Current

    Lesson 5: Build Multiplication Fluency

  6. Lesson 6

    Lesson 6: The Birds

  7. Lesson 7

    Lesson 7: World's Record Folk Dance

  8. Lesson 8

    Lesson 8: Partial Quotients: Strategy and Algorithm

  9. Lesson 9

    Lesson 9: Practice Division with Partial Quotients

  10. Lesson 10

    Lesson 10: Find Missing Side Lengths

  11. Lesson 11

    Lesson 11: World's Record Noodle Soup

  12. Lesson 12

    Lesson 12: Fractions as Partial Quotients (Optional)

  13. Lesson 13

    Lesson 13: Lots of Milk

  14. Lesson 14

    Lesson 14: Real-World Applications: Trash Problems