math grade 4 mrs. ennis long division (with remainders part 2) lesson seventeen
Post on 04-Jan-2016
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1. 56,785 – 8,888 =
2. 6,006 – K = 4,767
3. 4,000 x 3 =
4. 7 x 6 + 3 =
5. 535 ÷ 5 =
6. Eloise had 35 quarters. How many dollars did she have?
7.The number of quarts in 4 gallons.
8.The length of one side of a regular hexagon if its perimeter is 24cm.
9.Coach Jones bought 2 softballs for $5.89 each and a bat for $9.99. If he gave the clerk two $20.00 bills, how much change should he receive?
10. Three girls ran on the winning relay team. Their times were 52 seconds, 58 seconds, and 1 minute 4 seconds. Did they beat the last winning team score of 3 minutes 3 seconds?
To be really good at division, you must learn your multiplication facts. For this lesson, if you don’t know them, you may want to use a multiplication chart like this one:
Vocabulary
• dividend - the number you are dividing
• divisor - the number you are dividing by
• quotient - the evenly divided result
• remainder - what is left over that cannot be evenly divided
• divisable- can be divided by evenly
When writing it like this:
136, is the dividend
5, is the divisor 27, is
the quotient
1 is the remainder1365
27 r 1
5 Steps in Long Division
1. Divide
2. Multiply3. Subtract4. Bring down.
5. Repeat or Remainder
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Online Practice
http://resources.oswego.org/games/mathmagician/maths1.html
http://www.mrnussbaum.com/draggable_division/division.html
Math Fun:
Is it a simple task? Find the missing numbers as fast as you can!
0, 6, 24, 60, 120, 210, ___, ___, ___ (It’s a hard one!!!)
Answer:
The missing numbers are 336, 504, 720. The pattern is: Multiply the first three whole numbers, the next three whole numbers, and so on.0 x 1 x 2 = 01 x 2 x 3 = 62 x 3 x 4 = 24, and so on.
Resources:http://mathlearnnc.sharpschool.com/UserFiles/Servers/Server_4507209/File/Instructional%20Resources/G4WW1-4.pdf
http://math.pppst.com/division.html
http://www.syvum.com/cgi/online/fillin.cgi/teasers/hare1.tdf?0http://resources.oswego.org/games/mathmagician/maths1.html
http://www.mrnussbaum.com/draggable_division/division.html
http://nces.ed.gov/nceskids/grabbag/math_teasers/Challenge2.asp
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