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Division Word Problems

Mathematics • 60 • 20 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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Mathematics
60
20 students
7 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

I want to plan a maths lesson where the children do word problem solving questions related to division and division with remainders. The children will use manipulatives such as cubes, lollipop sticks, straws. The stimulus can be the children dividing their classmates into groups e.g. how many groups can we make with 4 people per group [total number in class is 20] or 3 people per group. Children may also practice their multiplication with two die, roll a 2 and roll a 6 = multiply them. As Multiplication and division have an inverse relationship. This is my lesson plan template: ST Name: Kym Fox ST Number: 40036679 Class Level: 2nd & 3rd Class Date: 8/5/25

Subject: Maths Time: 10:40 Duration of Lesson: 60 Minutes No of Pupils: 27 pupils Strand(s) Number Strand Unit(s)/ Element(s) Sets and operations Learning Outcome(s)/ Content Objectives: Understand and apply flexibly the four operations; and the relationships between operations. Learning Objectives: (Two are required. One other may be added if deemed necessary)

  1. The child should be enabled to:
  2. The child should be enabled to:

Assessment:

  1. Method:
  2. Assessment of:
  3. To be recorded: Teacher Questioning: (Insert I, D, C for relevant part of lesson) Lower order questions (Closed Questions)

Higher order questions (Open Questions) 1. 2. 3. Language Development opportunities in this lesson: Literacy Development opportunities in this lesson: Teaching Methodologies: Please underline the primary methodology/ies to be used during the lesson · For Mathematics: Using cognitively challenging tasks, Promoting Maths Talk, Fostering productive disposition, Encouraging playfulness, Emphasising mathematical modelling

Introduction: Stimulus: Elicit Prior Knowledge: Share Learning Intention:    Development:   Conclusion: Cognitive: Social: Transition (if appropriate:    Universal Design for Learning

Pupil(s) Reason(s) Method(s) Additional Comments/

The Learning Environment: Resources:

Division Word Problems


ST Name: Kym Fox

ST Number: 40036679

Class Level: 2nd & 3rd Class

Date: 8/5/25

Subject: Maths

Time: 10:40

Duration of Lesson: 60 Minutes

No of Pupils: 27 Pupils


Strand(s)

Number

Strand Unit(s)/Element(s)

Sets and Operations


Learning Outcome(s)/Content Objectives

  • Understand and apply flexibly the four operations; and the relationships between operations.
  • Recognise the inverse relationship between multiplication and division.

Learning Objectives:

  1. The child should be enabled to solve word problems involving division with remainders using manipulatives, demonstrating conceptual understanding of division as sharing and grouping (IE Curriculum Reference: Number, Sets and Operations, Strand Unit – Division and Multiplication Contexts, Level 2).
  2. The child should be enabled to connect multiplication and division facts by practising multiplication with two dice, reinforcing the inverse relationship between the two operations (IE Curriculum Reference: Number, Understanding Number, Multiplicative Reasoning, Level 2).

Assessment

  1. Method: Teacher observation during manipulatives activity and questioning; completed word problem worksheets.
  2. Assessment of: Ability to model division problems using physical materials; understanding of division with remainders; verbal explanation linking multiplication to division.
  3. To be recorded: Completed answers with working shown; student explanations during plenary; teacher notes on misconceptions and engagement level.

Teacher Questioning

Lower order questions (Closed Questions)

  1. How many groups of 4 can we make from 20 children?
  2. If we share 20 cubes equally among 3 groups, how many cubes does each group get?
  3. How many cubes are left over if you divide 20 by 3?

Higher order questions (Open Questions)

  1. Why do we sometimes have a remainder when dividing? Can you explain what it means?
  2. How does rolling two dice and multiplying the numbers help you understand division?
  3. Can you create your own word problem using the number of cubes/sticks we have?

Language Development opportunities in this lesson:

  • Use of mathematical vocabulary: groups, divide, remainder, equal shares, multiply, inverse, leftover.
  • Encouraging students to explain their reasoning orally and in writing.

Literacy Development opportunities in this lesson:

  • Reading and interpreting word problems.
  • Writing their explanations and solutions for division problems.
  • Writing their own word problems using everyday classroom contexts.

Teaching Methodologies:

Using cognitively challenging tasks, Promoting Maths Talk, Fostering productive disposition, Encouraging playfulness, Emphasising mathematical modelling


Lesson Breakdown


Introduction (10 minutes)

Stimulus:

  • The teacher introduces the idea of dividing classmates into groups. "We have 20 children in this class. How many groups of 4 can we make? How many groups of 3? Let's explore with our friends and manipulatives."

Elicit Prior Knowledge:

  • Ask: "Who can tell me what division means? Have you ever divided something equally?"
  • Brief recap on multiplication as repeated addition and how multiplication and division relate.

Share Learning Intention:

  • "Today, we are going to solve division word problems using cubes, sticks, and our class group as examples. We will also play a fun dice game to practise multiplication facts that help us understand division better."

Development (40 minutes)

Activity 1: Division with Manipulatives – Grouping Classmates (20 minutes)

  • Pupils work in pairs with cubes, lollipop sticks, and straws.
  • Teacher presents word problems related to dividing the class into groups, e.g., "If we want groups of 4 and we have 20 children, how many groups do we get? How many sticks or cubes would we need to show this?"
  • Pupils physically group manipulatives to represent the division problem, count equal sets, and find remainders where applicable.
  • Encourage students to record their answers numerically and visually with a drawing.
  • Teacher circulates and asks guiding questions, promoting maths talk and reasoning.

Activity 2: Multiplication Dice Game (20 minutes)

  • Pupils work in small groups of 4-5.
  • Each group has two dice. Pupils take turns to roll both dice, multiply the two numbers rolled, and record the product.
  • Discuss how knowing multiplication helps with division – if 2 × 6 = 12, then 12 divided by 6 equals 2.
  • Pupils write a sentence connecting the multiplication and division fact.
  • Encourage peer discussion and explanation to foster conceptual understanding.

Conclusion (10 minutes)

Cognitive:

  • Recap key points: division as grouping/sharing, division with remainders, inverse relationship between multiplication and division.
  • Ask students to share their groupings and multiplication facts they found interesting or challenging.

Social:

  • Invite pupils to explain their reasoning to the class/partners, encouraging confident mathematical communication.

Transition:

  • Prepare them for the next lesson on division using arrays or number lines, linking today’s hands-on practices to abstract representations.

Universal Design for Learning

Pupil(s)Reason(s)Method(s)Additional Comments/
Visual learnersBenefit from physical manipulationUse cubes, sticks to visualise divisionEncourage drawing diagrams
Kinesthetic learnersHands-on activities enhance understandingManipulative grouping, dice rolling gameMovement incorporated
EAL (English as Additional Language)Need concrete examples & repetitionUse clear mathematical vocabulary and gesturesRepeat key terms, use visuals
Pupils needing extra supportMay struggle with abstract conceptsPair work, one-to-one teacher supportScaffold language and tasks

The Learning Environment

Resources:

  • Sets of coloured cubes for each pair
  • Lollipop sticks and straws for grouping exercises
  • Two dice per small group
  • Whiteboards and markers for recording answers
  • Printed word problem worksheets tailored for division and remainder practice
  • Visual aids chart showing multiplication and division fact families

This lesson plan integrates real-life contexts and manipulative materials aligned with the IE Curriculum to build deep conceptual understanding of division and its inverse relationship with multiplication. It promotes mathematical discussion and playful engagement, designed for third-class learners’ developmental readiness.

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