Learning Objectives for This Lesson
By the end of this lesson, you will:
- Predict whether a product is greater, less, or equal
- Explain why factor > 1 stretches
- Explain why factor < 1 shrinks
- Connect
to equivalent fractions - Apply scaling to real-world contexts
Do Not Solve — Just Predict
What happens to the number 9?
— is the answer bigger or smaller than 9? — bigger or smaller than 9?
Scaling on the Number Line
The scale factor controls the direction: stretch, hold, or shrink
The Scale Factor Controls the Direction
The scale factor is the number you multiply by:
- Factor > 1 → product is greater (stretches)
- Factor = 1 → product is equal (holds)
- Factor < 1 → product is less (shrinks)
You don't need to compute — just check the factor against 1
Quick Check: Predict the Direction
Without computing, answer this:
Is
- What is the scale factor? →
- Is
greater than, less than, or equal to 1? - Since
, the product is less than 24
A Sentence Frame for Predictions
Use this pattern to explain your reasoning:
"The product is ___ than ___ because the scale factor is ___ than 1."
Example:
"The product is greater than
because the scale factor 3 is greater than 1."
Example: Scale Factor Greater Than One
- Scale factor: 3
- Since
, the product is greater than - Verify:
, and ✓
Example: Scale Factor Less Than One
- Scale factor:
- Since
, the product is less than 7 - Verify:
, and ✓
Important:
Compare to Either Factor — Both Work
The same expression
- Compared to 7: scale factor
→ product < 7 - Compared to
: scale factor → product >
Both are true! The product lands between the two factors.
Your Turn: Classify These Three Expressions
For each, predict: greater than, less than, or equal?
13 — scale factor is ___ 1 4 — scale factor is ___ 1 — scale factor is ___ 1
Predict first, then check on the next slide
Answers: Classifying the Three Expressions
: factor → product = 13 ✓ : factor → product > 4 ✓ : factor → product < ✓
Watch Out for Improper Fractions
Is
- Is
a fraction? Yes - Is
less than 1? No! — , so - The product is greater than 10
Quick check: numerator > denominator → fraction > 1 → product stretches
Case One: Factor Greater Than One Stretches
— the product exceeds 6- Taking
copies means 1.5 copies — more than 1 whole - Any factor > 1 means more than one full copy
Case Two: Factor Equals One Preserves Value
Multiplying by 1 changes nothing — and
The equivalent-fraction connection:
Multiplying by
Equivalent Fractions Through Scaling by One
Start with
→ same value ✓ → same value ✓ → same value ✓
Rule:
Case Three: Factor Less Than One Shrinks
— the product is less than 12- Taking
of 12 means only 2 of 3 equal parts - 2 out of 3 parts is less than the whole
Verify:
The Three Cases at a Glance
This diagram covers every positive scale factor
Quick Check: Explain Your Reasoning
Without computing, explain why
Your explanation should include:
- Which number is the scale factor?
- Is it greater than, less than, or equal to 1?
- Why does that make the product less than 20?
Scaling Appears in Real-World Contexts
The principle works in every context:
- Photos: scale factor controls size (enlarge or reduce)
- Recipes: scale factor adjusts amounts (more or less)
- Maps: scale factor relates distances (bigger or smaller)
Same question every time: Is the scale factor >, =, or < 1?
Example: Resizing a Photo Three Ways
An 8-inch photo printed at three different scales:
scale → shorter than 8 inches (shrink) scale → exactly 8 inches (hold) scale → taller than 8 inches (stretch)
Real-World Predictions: Recipe, Factory, Map
Recipe: Scale 2 cups by
- Factor
→ less flour needed
Factory: 500 widgets/day at
- Factor
→ more than 500
Map: Road is
- Factor
→ shorter than 10 miles
Practice: Predict These Mixed Scaling Problems
Predict without computing, then explain:
- Is
greater, less, or equal to 18? - Is
greater, less, or equal to 9? - 12-ounce drink scaled by
— more, less, or same?
Write predictions before advancing
Answers: Mixed Scaling Practice Problems Revealed
: factor → less than 18 (verify: 15) ✓ : factor → greater than 9 (verify: 12) ✓ : factor → equal to 12 ✓
Respond to This Common Multiplication Claim
"Multiplying always gives a bigger answer."
How would you respond? Think about:
- When is this true? (factor > 1)
- When is this false? (factor < 1 or factor = 1)
- Give a specific counterexample
Key Takeaways for Multiplication as Scaling
✓ Factor > 1 → product stretches
✓ Factor = 1 → product holds (
✓ Factor < 1 → product shrinks
Fractions can exceed 1 (numerator > denominator)
"Less than the factor" ≠ "less than 1"
Bigger digits don't mean bigger value
What Comes Next in Fraction Multiplication
Next lesson — 5.NF.B.6:
Solving real-world problems with fraction multiplication
You'll use today's scaling reasoning to:
- Estimate answers before computing
- Check whether your computed answers are reasonable
- Solve multi-step word problems involving fractions