Writing Division Stories for an Equation
Writing Division Stories for an Equation is a Grade 3 math skill from Eureka Math showing that a single division equation can represent two different real-world problem types. Partitive (finding group size): Total ÷ Number of Groups = Size per Group. Quotative (finding number of groups): Total ÷ Size per Group = Number of Groups. For 12 ÷ 4 = 3, a partitive story is '12 apples shared among 4 children gives 3 each,' and a quotative story is '12 apples in bags of 4 gives 3 bags.' Recognizing both types deepens understanding of division.
Key Concepts
A single division equation can represent two different types of problems: Partitive (finding group size): Total $\div$ Number of Groups = Size of Each Group Quotative (finding number of groups): Total $\div$ Size of Each Group = Number of Groups.
Common Questions
What are the two types of division stories for one equation?
Partitive: divide a total into a known number of equal groups to find the size per group. Quotative: divide a total by a known group size to find how many groups exist.
Write a partitive division story for 20 ÷ 5 = 4.
20 students are divided equally into 5 teams. Each team has 4 students. (Known: number of groups = 5. Found: size per group = 4.)
Write a quotative division story for 20 ÷ 5 = 4.
A teacher has 20 pencils and puts 5 in each box. She fills 4 boxes. (Known: size per group = 5. Found: number of groups = 4.)
Why can one division equation have two different stories?
Division finds a missing factor. Whether the unknown is the size per group or the number of groups, the arithmetic is the same: both use 20 ÷ 5 = 4.
In which textbook is Writing Division Stories for an Equation taught?
This skill is taught in Eureka Math, Grade 3.