Developmental Stages in Calculation Colehill First School 1st March 2013.

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Developmental Stages in Calculation Colehill First School 1st March 2013

Transcript of Developmental Stages in Calculation Colehill First School 1st March 2013.

Developmental Stages in Calculation

Colehill First School

1st March 2013

Addition and Subtraction

Part 1

Concrete Stage: Addition

Concrete stage: with real objects

putting together two sets of objects, with a number sentence:

3 + 2 = 5

Concrete Stage: Subtraction

Concrete stage: with real objectstaking a set of objects away from a larger

set, with number sentence

4 – 2 = 2

Counting Forwards (Addition) and Backwards (Subtraction)

Counting forwards along labelled number tracks or lines, with number sentences:

3 + 4 = 7

Counting Forwards (Addition) and Backwards (Subtraction)

Counting backwards along labelled number tracks or lines, with number sentences:

5 – 2 = 3

Place Value Addition and SubtractionPlace value addition using tens and

units:

20 + 3 = 23

Place Value Addition and SubtractionPlace value subtraction using tens and

units:

15 – 5 = 10

Addition and Subtraction using the Hundred Square:

Addition By Counting On Using A Blank Number Line:

47 + 36 = 83

47 50 80 83

47 77 83

Subtraction By Counting Back Using A Blank Number Line:

37 – 24 = 13

13 20 30 37

13 17 37

Expanded Vertical Layout

For addition: For subtraction:

47 + 327 – 116

76 300 20 7 -

13 (7+6) 100 10 6

110 (40 + 70) 200 10 1

123 = 211

Subtraction Using The Expanded Vertical Layout With Decomposition:

53 – 28 =

50 3 - 40 13

20 8 20 8

20 5 = 25

The Compact Written Method

For addition:

47+

76

123

1

The Compact Written Method

For subtraction: 53 – 28:

4

513 – 2 8 2 5

Multiplication and Division

Part 2

Multiplication

Concrete stageputting together equal sets, with counting:

1 2 3 4 / 5 6 7 8 / 9 10 11 12

Multiplication

Drawing stagerepresenting the concrete stage in pictures,

with repeated addition:

5 + 5 = 10

Multiplication

Counting forwards in jumps of greater than 1, both mentally and along labelled number tracks or lines, or on the hundred square, with number sentences written as repeated addition:

3 + 3 + 3 = 9

Multiplication

Introducing the multiplication symbol as a shorthand form of recording:

2 + 2 + 2 = 6

or 3 x 2 = 6

5 + 5 + 5 + 5 + 5 + 5 + 5 = 35

or 7 x 5 = 35

Multiplication

Recognising equivalent multiplication, e.g. using arrays:

2 x 4 = 8 * * * *

* * * *

4 x 2 = 8 * * * *

* * * *

Multiplication

Place Value: Multiplying by 10 and multiples of 10, using 0 as a place holder:

5 x 10 = 505 x 100 = 5005 x 1000 = 5000

Multiplication

Multiplication using partitioning:

e.g. 38 x 7 = (30 x 7) + (8 x 7)

124 x 6 = (100 x 6) + (20 x 6) + (4 x 6)

Multiplication

Grid Layout (expanded method): 124 x 6

X 100 20 4

6 600 + 120 + 24

=744

Multiplication

Vertical method for multiplication: 38 x 124 x 7 6 210 (30 x 7) 600 (100 x 6) 56 (8 x 7) 120 (20 x 6) 24 ( 4 x 6) 266 744

Multiplication

Multiplication using the compact written method:

38 X 124 X

7 6

266 744

5 1 2

Division

Concrete stage : sharing

sharing a set of objects between a group of people:

4 shared between 2 people gives 2 each.

Division

Drawing stage : sharingrepresenting the concrete stage in

pictures, recording using the division symbol.

e.g Sharing 6 sweets between 3 friends:

Joe Lucy Lee

* * * * * * 6 : 3 = 2

Division

Concrete stage: grouping

making groups or sets of a certain number:

e.g. 15 grouped into 5s gives 3 groups:

# # # # # # # # # # # # # # #

Division

Division as repeated subtraction:Counting backwards in jumps of greater than

1 along labelled number tracks or lines, or on hundred squares, with number sentences:

8 -:- 4 = 2

Division

Division as repeated subtraction without the number line, continuing until 0 (or a remainder) is reached, e.g. for 18 -:- 6:

18 – 6 = 12 – 6 = 6 – 6 = 0 I took 6 away three times, and so

18 -:- 6 = 3

And for 20 -:- 6: 20 – 6 = 14 – 6 = 8 – 6 = 2 I took 6 away 3 times, leaving 2 at the end,

so: 20 -:- 6 = 3 remainder 2

Division

Division using ‘chunking’ Chunking means subtracting larger groups, or

chunks, of the divisor number. This saves time and reduces the length of the repeated subtraction:

e.g. for 72 -:- 6 72 – 60 (10 X 6) 12 – 12 (2 X 6) 0 So, 72 -:- 6 = 12

Division

Short formal written method for division:

12

6 72

and with remainders:

20 r 4 or 20.5 8 164

Division

Long formal written method for division:

78 remainder 3 7 549 49 59 56 3