This means that when you are given a bunch of numbers that involve all the arithmetic operations, the sequence should be as follows:
Multiplication (M), Division (D), Addition (A) and Subtraction (S).
This explains why I started showing some samples of tricks in Multiplication first.
Fingering Is Actually Fun
For those who have children or grandchildren who are just starting to master or memorize the multiplication tables, I learned that most often, verifying the product by using one’s ten fingers is quite reliable and fun.
A good example is multiplying any single digit number (1-9) by 9:
a. 9 x 4
Answer: 36
Answer: 36
Hand verification: Hold both hands
in front of your face – drop the finger that corresponds to the number you are
multiplying (4) meaning the (4th finger) – count the fingers before the dropped
finger (in this case of 9 x 4) it is 3), then count the number after (in this
case 6) – the answer is 36.
b. 9 x 6
Answer: 54
Hand verification: Hold both hands
in front of your face – drop the finger that corresponds to the number you are
multiplying (6) meaning the (6th finger) – count the fingers before
the dropped finger (in this case it is 5), then count the number after (in this
case 4) – the answer is 54.
DIVIDE and CONQUER
Dividing numbers by 5:
Examples:
195 / 5 =
Answer: 39
How: Multiply the
number (195) by 2 and move the decimal point:
Step1: 195 * 2 = 390
Step2:
Move the decimal: 39.0 or just 39
2978 / 5 =
Answer: 595.6
How: Multiply the
number (2978) by 2 and move the decimal point:
step
1: 2978 * 2 = 5956
Step2:
595.6
Dividing by 25
Example:
1820 / 25 =
Answer: 72.8
How: 1820 x 4/100* = 7280/100 = 72.80
*Note: 1/25 = 4/100
DIVIDE AND CONQUER
My Dear Aunt Sally
(MDAS) or Multiplication, Division, Addition, Subtraction (MDAS), I heard this
first from my father.This means that when you are given a bunch of numbers that involve all the arithmetic operations, the sequence should be as follows: Multiplication (M), Division (D), Addition (A) and Subtraction (S).
This explains why I started showing some samples of tricks in Multiplication first.
Fingering Is Actually Fun
For those who have children or grandchildren who are just starting to master or memorize the multiplication tables, I learned that most often, verifying the product by using one’s ten fingers is quite reliable and fun.
A good example is multiplying any single digit number (1-9) by 9:
a. 9 x 4
Answer: 36
Hand verification: Hold both hands
in front of your face – drop the finger that corresponds to the number you are
multiplying (4) meaning the (4th finger) – count the fingers before the dropped
finger (in this case of 9 x 4) it is 3), then count the number after (in this
case 6) – the answer is 36.
b. 9 x 6
Answer: 54
Hand verification: Hold both hands
in front of your face – drop the finger that corresponds to the number you are
multiplying (6) meaning the (6th finger) – count the fingers before
the dropped finger (in this case it is 5), then count the number after (in this
case 4) – the answer is 54.
DIVIDE and CONQUER
Dividing numbers by 5:
Examples:
195 / 5
Answer: 39
How: Multiply the
number (195) by 2 and move the decimal point:
Step1: 195
* 2 = 390
Step2:
Move the decimal: 39.0 or just 39
2978 / 5 =
Answer: 595.6
How: Multiply the
number (2978) by 2 and move the decimal point:
step
1: 2978 * 2 = 5956
Step2:
595.6
Dividing by 25
Example:
1820 / 25 =
Answer: 72.8
How: 1820 x 4/100* = 7280/100 = 72.80
Note: 1/25 = 4/100
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