Basic Math

Division | Third Grade

➗ Division - Grade 3

Master Division Skills!

In Grade 3, we learn to use division tables, solve word problems, and discover divisibility rules that make division easier!

📋 Complete the Division Table

What is a Division Table?

A division table shows all the division facts for a specific divisor. It helps you learn and memorize division facts quickly!

\(\text{Dividend} \div \text{Divisor} = \text{Quotient}\)

Example: Division Table for 3

Division ProblemAnswer
\(3 \div 3\)1
\(6 \div 3\)2
\(9 \div 3\)3
\(12 \div 3\)4
\(15 \div 3\)5
\(18 \div 3\)6
\(21 \div 3\)7
\(24 \div 3\)8
\(27 \div 3\)9
\(30 \div 3\)10

How to Complete a Division Table

  1. Look at the divisor (the number you're dividing by)
  2. Use multiplication facts to help! If \(3 \times 4 = 12\), then \(12 \div 3 = 4\)
  3. Skip count by the divisor to find dividends
  4. Fill in the quotients (answers)

💡 Tip: Knowing your multiplication facts makes completing division tables easy!

📊 Division Input/Output Tables

What is an Input/Output Table?

An input/output table uses a division rule to turn input numbers into output numbers!

\(\text{Output} = \text{Input} \div \text{Rule}\)

Example 1: Rule - Divide by 5

InputRuleOutput
15÷ 53
25÷ 55
35÷ 57
40÷ 58

How to Use Input/Output Tables

  1. Find the rule (what division operation to use)
  2. Take each input number
  3. Divide by the rule number
  4. Write the answer in the output column

Example: If Input = 24 and Rule = ÷ 6
Then Output = \(24 \div 6 = 4\)

📖 Division Word Problems

Key Words for Division

  • Share equally - divide
  • Split into groups - divide
  • Divide - division
  • Each - divide
  • Per - divide
  • How many groups? - divide
  • How many in each group? - divide

Steps to Solve Division Word Problems

  1. Read the problem carefully
  2. Find the numbers
  3. Look for division key words
  4. Decide what to divide
  5. Write the division sentence
  6. Solve and find the answer
  7. Check - does your answer make sense?

Example Problems

Problem 1: Equal Sharing

Sarah has 24 cookies. She wants to share them equally among 6 friends. How many cookies does each friend get?

Step 1: Numbers: 24 cookies, 6 friends
Step 2: Key words: "share equally" → Divide!
Step 3: Division sentence: \(24 \div 6 = ?\)
Step 4: \(24 \div 6 = 4\)
Answer: Each friend gets 4 cookies. ✓

Problem 2: Equal Groups

A teacher has 48 pencils. She puts 8 pencils in each box. How many boxes does she need?

Step 1: Numbers: 48 pencils, 8 pencils per box
Step 2: Key words: "in each box" → Divide!
Step 3: Division sentence: \(48 \div 8 = ?\)
Step 4: \(48 \div 8 = 6\)
Answer: She needs 6 boxes. ✓

Problem 3: Array Problem

There are 35 students in a classroom. They sit in 5 equal rows. How many students are in each row?

Step 1: Numbers: 35 students, 5 rows
Step 2: Key words: "in each row" → Divide!
Step 3: Division sentence: \(35 \div 5 = ?\)
Step 4: \(35 \div 5 = 7\)
Answer: There are 7 students in each row. ✓

🎯 Divisibility Rules for 2, 5, and 10

What are Divisibility Rules?

Divisibility rules are shortcuts that help you tell if a number can be divided evenly by another number without actually dividing!

Just look at the last digit(s) of the number!

Rule for Divisibility by 2

A number is divisible by 2 if the last digit is EVEN
(0, 2, 4, 6, or 8)

Examples:

  • 24 → Last digit is 4 (even) → Divisible by 2 ✓
  • 138 → Last digit is 8 (even) → Divisible by 2 ✓
  • 57 → Last digit is 7 (odd) → NOT divisible by 2 ✗
  • 100 → Last digit is 0 (even) → Divisible by 2 ✓

Rule for Divisibility by 5

A number is divisible by 5 if the last digit is 0 or 5

Examples:

  • 35 → Last digit is 5 → Divisible by 5 ✓
  • 120 → Last digit is 0 → Divisible by 5 ✓
  • 87 → Last digit is 7 → NOT divisible by 5 ✗
  • 245 → Last digit is 5 → Divisible by 5 ✓

Rule for Divisibility by 10

A number is divisible by 10 if the last digit is 0

Examples:

  • 50 → Last digit is 0 → Divisible by 10 ✓
  • 370 → Last digit is 0 → Divisible by 10 ✓
  • 95 → Last digit is 5 → NOT divisible by 10 ✗
  • 1,000 → Last digit is 0 → Divisible by 10 ✓

Practice: Check Divisibility

NumberDivisible by 2?Divisible by 5?Divisible by 10?
42✓ (ends in 2)
75✓ (ends in 5)
90✓ (ends in 0)✓ (ends in 0)✓ (ends in 0)
63
140✓ (ends in 0)✓ (ends in 0)✓ (ends in 0)

Quick Summary:

  • 🔹 Divisible by 2: Last digit is 0, 2, 4, 6, or 8
  • 🔹 Divisible by 5: Last digit is 0 or 5
  • 🔹 Divisible by 10: Last digit is 0

💡 Notice: Numbers ending in 0 are divisible by 2, 5, AND 10!

📝 Important Formulas Summary

Basic Division:

\(\text{Dividend} \div \text{Divisor} = \text{Quotient}\)

Input/Output Table:

\(\text{Output} = \text{Input} \div \text{Rule}\)

Checking Division with Multiplication:

\(\text{Quotient} \times \text{Divisor} = \text{Dividend}\)

💡 Quick Learning Tips

  • Practice completing division tables to memorize division facts
  • Use multiplication to check your division answers
  • In word problems, look for key words like "share," "each," "groups"
  • Draw pictures to understand word problems better
  • Divisibility by 2: Look for even numbers (0, 2, 4, 6, 8)
  • Divisibility by 5: Numbers end in 0 or 5
  • Divisibility by 10: Numbers must end in 0
  • Input/output tables show patterns in division
  • Always check if your answer makes sense in word problems
  • Practice with real objects to understand equal sharing
  • Numbers ending in 0 are special - divisible by 2, 5, AND 10!
  • Master your multiplication tables - they help with division!
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