Multiplication | 5th Grade Math

Multiplication

Grade 5 Math – Patterns, Properties & Strategies

Multiplication Patterns over Increasing Place Values

  • Each step left on a place value chart = Multiply by 10
  • Each step right = Divide by 10
  • Pattern: Multiplying a number by 10, 100, 1,000... adds zeros!
Formula:
If \( a \times 10^n \), move decimal \( n \) places right or add \( n \) zeros.
E.g., \( 32 \times 1,000 = 32,000 \)

Multiply Numbers Ending in Zeros

  • Multiply the non-zero digits, then add the zeros from both numbers!
  • Pattern: \( 400 \times 50 = (4 \times 5) \) and two zeros from 400 + one zero from 50 = 20,000
Formula: Let a0...0 × b0...0 = (a × b) × 10^{m+n}
Where m, n = number of zeros in each factor

Multiply a Whole Number by a Power of Ten

  • Move the decimal point right by the exponent's value.
  • Multiply 56 by 1000: \( 56 \times 10^3 = 56,000 \)
Formula: \( a \times 10^n \): add \( n \) zeros to a.

Estimate Products

  1. Round each factor to a "friendly" number (10s, 100s, ...)
  2. Multiply the rounded numbers (ignoring their original digits)
  3. Example: \( 389 \times 72 \approx 400 \times 70 = 28,000 \)

Multiplying by 1-digit and 2-digit Numbers

  • Line up numbers by rightmost digit.
  • Multiply each digit, carry over, then sum partial products.
  • Example:
    \( 24 \times 36 = (24 \times 6) + (24 \times 30) = 144 + 720 = 864 \)

Properties of Multiplication

Property NameFormulaExample
Commutative\( a \times b = b \times a \)\( 3 \times 4 = 4 \times 3 = 12 \)
Associative\( (a \times b) \times c = a \times (b \times c) \)\( (2 \times 3) \times 7 = 2 \times (3 \times 7) = 42 \)
Distributive\( a \times (b+c) = a\times b + a\times c \)\( 5 \times (8+2) = 5\times 8 + 5\times 2 = 50 \)
Identity\( a \times 1 = a \)\( 8 \times 1 = 8 \)
Zero\( a \times 0 = 0 \)\( 6 \times 0 = 0 \)

Multiply Using Properties

  • Use distributive property to break numbers into easier parts.
  • \( 28\times 16 = 28 \times (10+6) = (28\times 10) + (28\times 6) = 280 + 168 = 448 \)
  • Use commutative/associative to rearrange and group for easier calculation.

Compare Products of Whole Numbers

  • Estimate products or use properties to predict which product is larger.
  • Example: Is \( 250 \times 79 \) larger than \( 220 \times 92 \)? Estimate by rounding to \( 300 \times 80 = 24,000 \) vs. \( 200 \times 100 = 20,000 \), so first is larger.

Quick Reference Summary

  • When multiplying by powers of ten, count the zeros!
  • Use rounding for fast estimation.
  • Commutative: Order doesn't matter.
    Associative: Grouping doesn't matter.
    Distributive: Break numbers apart for easier calculation.
  • Always check you line up your digits for multi-digit multiplication!
Study Tip: Practice estimation and properties to improve mental math speed!