Sensim Math · Depth 한국어

3-2 · Division

Remainder must be less than the divisor

3.OA.B.63.OA.C.7 · take · grade 3

Archetype: Divisibility and Remainder Reasoning · step in a 8-type progression

▶ Practice — 12 problems

Find the greatest number that \blacksquare can be.

÷8=11\blacksquare \div 8 = 11 \cdots \blacktriangle

Show solution

Understand

A number (the blank) divided by 8 gives quotient 11 and some remainder (the triangle). We want the greatest possible value of the blank, so we make the remainder as large as it can be.

Givens
  • The blank divided by 8 has quotient 11 and remainder equal to the triangle.
  • The remainder is whatever makes the blank largest.
Unknowns
  • The greatest possible value of the blank (the dividend).
Constraints
  • The remainder must be less than the divisor 8.
  • The quotient stays exactly 11.

Plan

#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #6 Guess and Check

Use dividend = 8 times quotient plus remainder. To make the dividend largest while keeping quotient 11, choose the biggest allowed remainder, which is 7.

Execute

#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.B.6
A remainder must be smaller than the divisor 8, so the greatest it can be is 7. A remainder of 8 or more would increase the quotient.
<8=7\blacktriangle < 8 \Rightarrow \blacktriangle = 7
The remainder is always less than the divisor, so 7 is the biggest value that keeps the quotient at 11.
#11 Work Backwards 3.OA.C.7
The dividend equals 8 times the quotient 11, plus the remainder 7.
8×11+7=88+7=958 \times 11 + 7 = 88 + 7 = 95
Multiplying the divisor by the quotient and adding the largest remainder gives the largest number that still divides to give 11.
Answer: 95

Review

Check: 95 divided by 8 is 11 remainder 7, since 8 times 11 is 88 and 95 minus 88 is 7, and 7 is less than 8. Trying 96 would give quotient 12, too big, so 95 is the greatest.

List the candidates (tool 2): dividends giving quotient 11 are 88 (r 0) up to 95 (r 7); the next, 96, bumps the quotient to 12, so 95 is the maximum.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.B.6 Understand division as an unknown-factor problem — Recognizing the remainder must be less than 8, so its largest value is 7.
  • 3.OA.C.7 Fluently multiply and divide within 100 — Computing 8 times 11 plus 7 to get the greatest dividend.
💡 This only needs Grade 3 division: the remainder maxes out at one less than the divisor, then multiply back!