Arrays
Commutative Property

Distributive Property

Associative Property
Multiplication
100

1. Elena arranged her pencils in an array.

Look at the array below:

🟦🟦🟦🟦🟦🟦
 πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦
 πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦
 πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦
 πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦πŸŸ¦

Which two expressions can be used to find the total number of pencils?

A. 3 Γ— 6 and 2 Γ— 6
 B. 6 Γ— 5 and 5 Γ— 6
 C. 5 Γ— 5 and 1 Γ— 6
 D. 2 Γ— 5 and 3 Γ— 6

βœ… Correct Answer: B. 6 Γ— 5 and 5 Γ— 6
(Commutative Property: Same total, different order)

100

2. Choose Yes or No to tell if the Commutative Property of Multiplication is being used.

2a. 3 Γ— 7 = 3 Γ— (3 + 4)
 β˜ Yes ☐ No

2a. 3 Γ— 7 = 3 Γ— (3 + 4) β†’ ❌ No (This is distributive, not commutative)

100

3. Carlos says a 10s fact can be broken into two 5s facts.

Write an equation to test his generalization.

βœ… Sample Equation:
10 Γ— 4 = (5 Γ— 4) + (5 Γ— 4)
10 Γ— 4 = 20 + 20 = 40 βœ”οΈ

100

6. A toy store displays 5 toys on each shelf.

There are 3 shelves on each of the store’s 5 walls.
 How many toys are displayed? Show your work.

6. A toy store displays 5 toys per shelf, 3 shelves on 5 walls.

Shelves: 3 shelves Γ— 5 walls = 15 shelves
Toys: 15 Γ— 5 = 75 toys

βœ… Answer: 75 toys

100

8. Sarah has 4 boxes of marbles.

There are 10 marbles in each box.
 How many marbles does Sarah have? Show your work.

__________ marbles

8. Sarah has 4 boxes of 10 marbles.

4 Γ— 10 = 40 marbles

βœ… Answer: 40 marbles

200

 4. Nadia broke up a large array into a 2 Γ— 9 array and a 5 Γ— 9 array.

What was the large array? Show your work.

βœ… Total array: (2 Γ— 9) + (5 Γ— 9) = 18 + 45 = 63
So, large array is 7 Γ— 9

200

2. Choose Yes or No to tell if the Commutative Property of Multiplication is being used.


2b. 5 Γ— 9 = 9 Γ— 5
 β˜ Yes ☐ No

2b. 5 Γ— 9 = 9 Γ— 5 β†’ βœ… Yes

200

5. Which facts can you use to find 7 Γ— 9?

Select all that apply.

☐ 7 Γ— 4 and 7 Γ— 5
 β˜ 7 Γ— 1 and 7 Γ— 8
 β˜ 2 Γ— 9 and 5 Γ— 9
 β˜ 3 Γ— 3 and 4 Γ— 9
 β˜ 6 Γ— 9 and 1 Γ— 9

5. Which facts can you use to find 7 Γ— 9?

βœ… Correct Answers:
β˜‘ 7 Γ— 4 and 7 Γ— 5 β†’ 28 + 35 = 63
β˜‘ 2 Γ— 9 and 5 Γ— 9 β†’ 18 + 45 = 63
β˜‘ 6 Γ— 9 and 1 Γ— 9 β†’ 54 + 9 = 63
❌ 7 Γ— 1 and 7 Γ— 8 = 7 + 56 = 63 (correct sum, but not a common strategy)
❌ 3 Γ— 3 and 4 Γ— 9 = 9 + 36 = 45 βœ–οΈ

200

10. A farmer has 3 barns.

Each barn has 4 stalls.
 Each stall holds 6 cows.

How many cows are there in total?
 Write an expression: ____________________________
 Answer: __________ cows

10. Farmer has 3 barns, 4 stalls per barn, 6 cows per stall

Expression: 3 Γ— 4 Γ— 6
Step 1: 3 Γ— 4 = 12
Step 2: 12 Γ— 6 = 72 cows

βœ… Answer:
Expression: 3 Γ— 4 Γ— 6
Total: 72 cows

200

7x8

56

300

11. Chase arranged his counters into this array:

πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄
 πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄
 πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄

A. What two multiplication facts could Chase use to write an equation for the array?

11. Chase’s array: 3 rows of 8 counters

2x8 plus 1x8

300

2. Choose Yes or No to tell if the Commutative Property of Multiplication is being used.

2c. (2 Γ— 5) Γ— 3 = (5 Γ— 2) Γ— 3
 β˜ Yes ☐ No

2c. (2 Γ— 5) Γ— 3 = (5 Γ— 2) Γ— 3 β†’ βœ… Yes

300

7. Find the number that makes the equation correct.

(2 Γ— 6) + (5 Γ— 6) = _______

 Explain your reasoning:

7. (2 Γ— 6) + (5 Γ— 6) =

12 + 30 = 42

βœ… Answer: 42
Reasoning: Add the two products that share the same factor (6):
(2 + 5) Γ— 6 = 7 Γ— 6 = 42 βœ”οΈ

300

Priya bought 3 adult tickets and 5 child tickets for a concert.

Ticket Prices:

  • Child: $3

  • Adult: $8




How much did she spend? Show your equations.

βœ… Answer:
Equations:
3 Γ— 8 = 24
5 Γ— 3 = 15
24 + 15 = $39

300

9x9

81

400

11. Chase arranged his counters into this array:

πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄
 πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄
 πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΄

B. If Chase adds one more row of 8 counters,what equations can he use?

2x8 plus 2x8

400

2. Choose Yes or No to tell if the Commutative Property of Multiplication is being used.

2d. (3 Γ— 2) Γ— 5 = 5 Γ— (3 Γ— 2)
 β˜ Yes ☐ No

2d. (3 Γ— 2) Γ— 5 = 5 Γ— (3 Γ— 2) β†’ βœ… Yes

400

9. Ben organizes his trading cards into a 4 Γ— 5 array.

 How can he break apart his arrays?
 

4 Γ— 5
 β˜ 2 Γ— 5 and 2 Γ— 5
 β˜ 1 Γ— 5 and 3 Γ— 5
 β˜ 4 Γ— 3 and 4 Γ— 2

4 Γ— 5
β˜‘ 2 Γ— 5 and 2 Γ— 5
β˜‘ 1 Γ— 5 and 3 Γ— 5
❌ 4 Γ— 3 and 4 Γ— 2 β†’ These break the columns, not rows.

400

A classroom has 2 bookshelves.
Each bookshelf has 3 rows.
Each row holds 4 books.

How many books are there in total?
Show your work.

2x3 is 6

6x4 is 24

400

7x 6

42

500

Maya organizes hers into a 6 Γ— 7 array.
 How can they break apart their arrays?
 6 Γ— 7
 β˜ 3 Γ— 7 and 3 Γ— 7
 β˜ 2 Γ— 7 and 4 Γ— 7
 β˜ 6 Γ— 3 and 6 Γ— 4

6 Γ— 7
β˜‘ 3 Γ— 7 and 3 Γ— 7
β˜‘ 2 Γ— 7 and 4 Γ— 7
❌ 6 Γ— 3 and 6 Γ— 4 β†’ Doesn’t break up 7 correctly

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