Home Activity: Multi-digit Multiplication

10-minute activities to practice with your child at home

Dear Families,

Your fourth grader is learning to multiply larger numbers - up to 4-digit by 1-digit and 2-digit by 2-digit! They're using strategies like the area model, partial products, and the standard algorithm. These activities help connect classroom learning to real life.

Why This Matters for the FAST Test

The Florida FAST assessment tests multi-digit multiplication through computation problems AND word problems. Students who understand WHY multiplication methods work (not just the steps) can catch their own errors and solve unfamiliar problems with confidence.

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Activity 1: Grocery Store Multiplication

Real-world multiplication with prices

  1. While shopping, pick an item and a quantity: "We need 24 juice boxes. Each pack of 6 costs $4."
  2. Ask: "How many packs do we need?" (24 / 6 = 4 packs)
  3. Then: "What's the total cost?" (4 x $4 = $16)
  4. Try larger numbers: "The store sold 45 cases of water today. Each case has 32 bottles. How many bottles total?"
  5. Encourage estimation first: "About how many? 45 is close to 50, 32 is close to 30... so about 1,500!"
Tip:

Use receipts after shopping! Pick items and create word problems: "If we bought 3 times as many bananas, how much would that cost?"

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Activity 2: Build an Area Model

Visual understanding with rectangles

  1. Use graph paper, tiles, or draw on paper to make rectangles.
  2. For 23 x 14, draw a rectangle that's 23 units by 14 units.
  3. Divide it: 23 = 20 + 3, and 14 = 10 + 4. Now you have 4 smaller rectangles!
  4. Calculate each section: 20x10=200, 20x4=80, 3x10=30, 3x4=12
  5. Add them up: 200 + 80 + 30 + 12 = 322
  6. Check with a calculator - it matches!
Why Area Models?

This method shows that multiplication finds the area of a rectangle. It also reveals the partial products that are "hidden" in the standard algorithm!

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Activity 3: Mental Math Challenge

Build number sense and flexibility

  1. Practice "friendly number" multiplication: "What's 25 x 8?"
  2. Strategy: 25 x 8 = 25 x 4 x 2 = 100 x 2 = 200 (since 25 x 4 = 100)
  3. Try: "What's 15 x 12?" (Think: 15 x 10 + 15 x 2 = 150 + 30 = 180)
  4. Practice doubling: 24 x 5 = 24 x 10 / 2 = 240 / 2 = 120
  5. Make it a game: Time how fast you can solve 5 problems mentally!
Tip:

Mental math builds number sense! Even if your child uses the algorithm on paper, these strategies help them estimate and check their work.

Questions to Ask Your Child

Resumen en Espanol

Multiplicacion de numeros grandes: Su hijo esta aprendiendo a multiplicar numeros de hasta 4 digitos por 1 digito (como 2,345 x 7) y 2 digitos por 2 digitos (como 34 x 56). Usan el modelo de area, productos parciales, y el algoritmo tradicional.

Actividades en casa:

Pregunta clave: "Por que escribimos un cero cuando multiplicamos por las decenas?"