Chapter
Chapter
Understanding Multiplication
and Division
Teachers teach mathematics because they want others to understand
it in ways that will contribute to success and satisfaction in school,
work, and life. Helping your students develop a robust and lasting
understanding of multiplication and division requires that you understand this mathematics deeply. But what does this mean?
It is easy to think that understanding an area of mathematics,
such as multiplication and division, means knowing certain facts,
being able to solve particular types of problems, and mastering
relevant vocabulary. For example, for the upper elementary grades,
you are expected to know such facts as multiplication of whole
numbers is a commutative operation. You are expected to be skillful in solving problems that involve multiplying large numbers.
Your mathematical vocabulary is assumed to include such terms as
product, divisor, remainder, factor, and multiple.
Obviously, facts, vocabulary, and techniques for solving certain
types of problems are not all that you are expected to know about
multiplication and division. For example, in your ongoing work
with students, you have undoubtedly discovered that you need not
only to know common algorithms for multiplication and division
but also to be able to follow strategies that your students create.
It is also easy to focus on a very long list of mathematical ideas
that all teachers of mathematics in grades 35 are expected to know
and teach about multiplication and division. Curriculum developers
often devise and publish such lists. However important the individual items might be, these lists cannot capture the essence of a rich
understanding of the topic. Understanding multiplication and division deeply requires you not only to know important mathematical
ideas but also to recognize how these ideas relate to one another.
Your understanding continues to grow with experience and as
a result of opportunities to embrace new ideas and find new connections among familiar ones.
Introduction
Furthermore, your understanding of multiplication and division should transcend the content intended for your students. Some
of the differences between what you need to know and what you
expect them to learn are easy to point out. For instance, your understanding of the topic should include a grasp of the way in which
multiplication of two-digit numbers connects with multiplication
of binomial expressionsmathematics that students will encounter
later but do not yet understand.
Other differences between the understanding that you need to
have and the understanding that you expect your students to acquire are less obvious, but your experiences in the classroom have
undoubtedly made you aware of them at some level. For example,
how many times have you been grateful to have an understanding
of multiplication and division that enables you to recognize the
merit in a students unanticipated mathematical question or claim?
How many other times have you wondered whether you could be
missing such an opportunity or failing to use it to full advantage
because of a gap in your knowledge?
As you have almost certainly discovered, knowing and being
able to do familiar mathematics are not enough when youre in the
classroom. You also need to be able to identify and justify or refute
novel claims. These claims and justifications might draw on ideas
or techniques that are beyond the mathematical experiences of your
students and current curricular expectations for them. For example,
you may need to be able to refute the often-asserted, erroneous
claim that three or more whole numbers can be added, subtracted,
multiplied, or divided in any order. Or you may need to explain to a
student why carrying is appropriate in some multiplication work.
Introduction
35
3 24
140
while saying 4 times 5 is 20, so I put down the zero and carry
the 2; 4 times 3 is 12 and 2 more is 14, so I write down 140; and
then. The students response to the question, Why do you add
12 and 2 when this is a multiplication problem? can reveal much
about how the student understands the mechanics of a common algorithm that he or she will soon extend to products of numbers with
more than two digits.
Ready to Begin
This introduction has painted the background, preparing you for the
big ideas and associated essential understandings related to multiplication and division that you will encounter and explore in chapter 1. Reading the chapters in the order in which they appear can
be a very useful way to approach the book. Read chapter 1 in more
than one sitting, allowing time for reflection. Absorb the ideasboth
big ideas and essential understandingsrelated to multiplication
and division. Appreciate the connections among these ideas. Carry