Big digits in high places
Using the number cards , , and , each exactly once, form two three-digit numbers. Write the subtraction that makes the difference of the two numbers as large as possible, and find that difference.
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Understand
Use the digit cards 5, 3, and 7 once each to build two three-digit numbers, then subtract so the difference is as large as possible. Find that largest possible difference.
- The available digit cards are 5, 3, and 7.
- Each card is used exactly once across the two numbers... but with only three cards, the standard reading is to form the largest and smallest three-digit numbers from the same three digits and subtract.
- Both numbers are three-digit numbers.
- Which arrangement of 5, 3, 7 gives the largest number and which gives the smallest.
- The largest possible difference of the two numbers.
- Only the digits 5, 3, and 7 may be used.
- Each number is a three-digit number (hundreds, tens, units).
Plan
#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List
To make a difference biggest, make the first number as large as possible and the second as small as possible; the place-value principle (big digits in high places) tells us how to arrange the cards, and a quick systematic check confirms it.
Execute
Review
753 and 357 use each card 5, 3, 7 exactly once, and 753 - 357 = 396 is positive and under 753, which is sensible. Any other pairing of these digits gives a smaller spread, so 396 is the maximum.
List all distinct three-digit numbers from 5, 3, 7 (357, 375, 537, 573, 735, 753) and check max minus min: 753 - 357 = 396 confirms the answer.
Standards · min grade 3
2.NBT.A.4Compare two three-digit numbers using symbols — Comparing arrangements to identify the smallest three-digit number.3.NBT.A.2Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Forming the largest number and subtracting to get the difference.