Learn on PengiEureka Math, Grade 4Chapter 15: Division of Thousands, Hundreds, Tens, and Ones

Lesson 3: Represent and solve three-digit dividend division with divisors of 2, 3, 4, and 5 numerically.

In this Grade 4 Eureka Math lesson from Chapter 15, students learn to represent and solve three-digit dividend division problems numerically using divisors of 2, 3, 4, and 5. The lesson focuses on the long division algorithm alongside place value charts and unit form reasoning, building fluency with problems such as 297 ÷ 4 and 846 ÷ 2. Students also practice multiplying and dividing by place value units to strengthen their understanding of hundreds, tens, and ones in division.

Section 1

Executing the Standard Algorithm for Three-Digit Division

Property

The standard algorithm for division is a step-by-step process to find a quotient and a remainder. The relationship is defined by: Dividend=(Quotient×Divisor)+RemainderDividend = (Quotient \times Divisor) + Remainder.

Examples

Lesson overview

Expand to review the lesson summary and core properties.

Expand

Section 1

Executing the Standard Algorithm for Three-Digit Division

Property

The standard algorithm for division is a step-by-step process to find a quotient and a remainder. The relationship is defined by: Dividend=(Quotient×Divisor)+RemainderDividend = (Quotient \times Divisor) + Remainder.

Examples