Math Basics

Learning the Basic Facts - While flash cards are still a great tool to help 
students learn the basic arithmetic facts, students also use strategies to 
help them with facts. This page contains some of the strategies students 
learn to master their facts.
  1. Math at Home, or How Parents Can Help Their Children
  2. Basic Facts Strategies
  3. Plus 2
  4. Doubles and Plus Tens
  5. Adding Near Doubles or 'Neighbor Numbers'
  6. Adding 'Neighbor in the Middle' Numbers
  7. Make a Ten
  8. Adding Hungry Eights and Hungry Nines
  9. Multiplying by Zero and by One
  10. Multiplying by Two
  11. Multiplying by Three
  12. Multiplying by Four
  13. Multiplying by Five
  14. Multiplying by Six
  15. Multiplying Squares
  16. The Dreaded 7 x 8
  17. And the rest....



Math at Home, or How Parents Can Help Their Children

It is critical that students have a working command of the basic 
arithmetic facts in fifth grade. The computation work will be 
more easily accomplished and less prone to errors if students 
have quick rote recall of facts in addition, subtraction, 
multiplication, and division. We will have some practice drills 
on these skills, but our curriculum does not provide time to 
teach these skills since they are covered in previous grades. 

In Reading, students must be able to read 98% of the words in a 
text in order to comprehend at least 70% of the material. 
Similarly, in Math a student must have nearly 100% accuracy in 
basic facts in order to solve problems. Math facts that are shown 
to be deficient on a timed test will be sent home for practice. 
Time for painless practice of basic facts can be found throughout 
the day: at school, in the car, during chores like table 
setting and clearing/washing dishes and folding laundry, or 
during television commercials.

The Math Newsletter, which will be posted in the Newsletter 
section of this site, will explain ways to practice the current 
unit's skills at home.
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Basic Facts Strategies

Students generally know most of the facts, but once they start 
working on multiplication and division, their addition and 
subtraction facts slip. Since much of our work involves some 
mental math facility, students need to keep their addition, 
subtraction, multiplication, and division skills sharp. 
Students know their +0 and +1 facts. 

Using strategies, students actually learn all 100 facts on a 1-10 
Hundreds Chart except 4 facts. Because addition is commutative 
(the order of the factors does not change the sum) there are 
really only 2 facts to learn since 3 + 6 is the same as 6 + 3 for 
example. The 'unknown facts' that must be learned are: 3 + 6 and 
4 + 7.

Subtraction facts are found by using Fact Families, just like 
students found in the primary grades. 7, 8 and 15 are a Fact 
Family: 7 + 8 = 15, 8 + 7 = 15, 15 - 7 = 8 and 15 - 8 = 7.
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Plus 2

The +2 facts are found by skip counting to the next even or odd 
number depending on the other addend. Practice skip counting by 
twos using even numbers or odd numbers. Start at a different 
point each time, like 39, 41, 43, 45, 47 etc.
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Doubles and Plus Tens

Students know the doubles facts from playing board games and they 
can add ten by increasing the tens digit by one.
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Adding Near Doubles or 'Neighbor Numbers'

Another strategy, Neighbor Numbers, is used when the addends are 
consecutive numbers on the number line, like 5 + 6. The strategy 
is based on a known doubles fact: 6 = 5 + 1, so 5 + 6 is the same 
as 5 + 5 + 1 or 11.

Try laying out pennies or other objects: five in one group and 
six in the next group. By moving one penny from the group of six 
to the side, students can see the 5 + 5 fact. Repeating this 
activity for other Neighbor Number pairs helps students to 
internalize the concept.
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Adding 'Neighbor in the Middle' Numbers

Another strategy works for numbers separated by one place on a 
number line like 6 + 8. I call these facts Neighbor in the Middle 
facts since the sum of the two numbers is the Doubles fact for 
the Neighbor in the Middle on the number line, or 7 in this case. 
So, 6 + 8 = 7 + 7 or 14.

Try laying out pennies or other objects: six in one group and 
eight in the next group. By moving one penny from the group of 
eight to the group of six, students can see the 7 + 7 fact. 
Repeating this activity for other Neighbor in the Middle pairs 
helps students to internalize the concept.
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Make a Ten

Make Ten is usually an easy strategy for most students. They 
learn the combinations that make ten: 1 + 9, 2 + 8, 3 + 7, etc.
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Adding Hungry Eights and Hungry Nines

My last strategy is Hungry Eights and Hungry Nines. In lower 
grades, this strategy is taught using blocks that link together. 
To use Hungry Eights, students have a 'train' of eight blocks 
hooked together. Eights are always hungry for two more blocks ... 
which will make them a ten. Students take two from the other 
addend to put with the eight and make a ten. The remaining 
amount from the second addend is added to ten. For example, 8 + 7 
would mean that students should take two from the seven. That 
makes a ten and five more or fifteen. The same strategy works for 
Hungry Nines, which are always hungry for one more to make them a 
ten. So, to add 9 + 5, take one from the five to make a ten and 
add the remaining four for fourteen.
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Multiplying by Zero and by One

Zero times any number means we have that number zero times and 
the product will always be zero. This is known as the Zero 
Property of Multiplication.

The Identity Property of Multiplication, or Identity Property, 
says that any number times one means we have that number one 
time, so one times any number is that number.
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Multiplying by Two

The twos facts are the same as the Doubles in addition, so 
students should already know the twos. Twos facts are always even 
numbers, so they are divisible by 2 and end in 0, 2, 4, 6, or 8.
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Multiplying by Three

Multiplying by three means three sets of a group. Students can 
find threes by building from their twos. Three sets are like 
doubles plus one more set. So, for example, 6 x 3 can be three 
sets of six -- 6 + 6 = 12, 12 + 6 more = 18 or double six is 
twelve, plus one more six is eighteen.
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Multiplying by Four

To multiply by four, students have already learned to double the 
Doubles fact. A mnemonic story can also help students to skip 
count by fours: Four ate twelve sixteens going down Easy Street 
when Thirty-Two and Thirty-Six passed him doing Forty. The 
diagram that accompanies the story shows a caricature character 
Four eating Sixteens. He already has a 3 x 4 array in his tummy, 
but one number is missing from a corner -- it is the twelfth 
sixteen being eaten. Easy Street is a row of townhouses with 
house numbers 20, 24 and 28 for easy skip counting. Two more 
caricature characters, Thirty-Two and Thirty-Six are riding 
tandem on a scooter by a speed limit sign that reads 40 mph. So 
students recall the skip counting multiples: 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 
24, 28, 32, 36, 40.

Numbers that are divisible by four are numbers whose two 
rightmost digits form a multiple of four. This is only helpful 
about half the time ;-O
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Multiplying by Five

Skip counting by fives has been done so often that most students 
already know the fives facts. Multiples of five always end in 
zero or five with even multiples being the zero in the ones place 
and odd multiples ending in the five.

Students can also use the tens facts for even multiples of five --
 5 x 6 can be found from 10 x 6 = 60. Since 5 is half of ten, 5 x 
6 is half of 10 x 6 or 30. Some students see a pattern in the 
even multiples: cut the even factor in half and tack on a zero 
for the ten. It's the same idea, but the student cuts in half 
before making the ten multiple :-)
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Multiplying by Six

Just as we double the twos facts for the fours, we double the 
threes facts for the sixes. Numbers that are divisible by six are 
even numbers whose digits add up to a multiple of three.
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Multiplying Squares

A number times itself is a square number because it can be 
represented in a square array, and squares are usually easily 
recalled by most fifth graders, like 4 x 4 = 16 and 5 x 5 = 25.
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The Dreaded 7 x 8

This fact is considered the most challenging for students to 
learn. I tell students about my teacher who shouted 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 
in my face when I couldn't immediately supply the answer to 7 x 
8. Unfortunately for me, I had been absent the day before when 
she taught students to say five, six, seven, eight for 56 = 7 x 8.

Alternately, students can start at the bottom and write the even 
digits in a column of ten numbers: 0,2,4,6,8,0,2,4,6,8. Starting 
at the top in the tens column, skip the first number (8) and then 
list 1,2,3,4,4,5,6,7,8 going down the column. These are the first 
ten multiples of eight!
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And the rest....

Nine facts use 'tricks' like the hand trick and the pattern 
trick. We use these in class.

Tens are easy to skip count and form an easy pattern.

That just leaves the sevens and eights. Most of them are already 
known since students know the commutative facts for the factors 1-
6, like 7 x 4 = 4 x 7 and that's a double the doubles fact. So 
students need to learn 7 x 6, 7 x 8,  and 8 x 6. Students know 
many of these 100 multiplication facts already also, and they 
should know the math property that applies. They can also use the 
Build from Fives strategy. If finding 7 x 8, students can 
determine 5 x 8, which is 40, and then determine that 2 more sets 
of eight are needed to get from 5 eights to 7 eights, so 2 x 8 = 
16. Put the partials together: 40 + 16 = 56, so 7 x 8 = 56.

Once students know a multiplication fact, they can figure out the 
related division fact.
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