Complete addition and multiplication tables
The grids below are parts of an addition table and a multiplication table. Find the rule for how the numbers change as you move right (across a row) and down (down a column), then find the numbers that belong in A, B, and C.
Addition table (top grid): the top header row (the numbers being added on) reads from the left, and the leftmost column (the numbers being added to) reads from the top. Inside the grid the entries / / are filled in, and one cell is left blank as A.
Multiplication table (bottom grid): the top header row (the numbers being multiplied by) reads , and the leftmost column reads from the top. In this part of the multiplication table, two cells are left blank as B and C.
Show solution
Understand
Two grids are shown: part of an addition table and part of a multiplication table. Using the rule that values grow by a fixed step as you move right and as you move down, find the missing numbers in cells A, B, and C.
- Addition table header row (the numbers added on): 2, 4, 6.
- Addition table left column (the numbers added to): 2, 4, 6, 8.
- Filled addition entries: row for 2 is 4, 6, 8; row for 4 is 6, 8, A; row for 6 is 8, 10, 12.
- Multiplication table header row: 1, 3, 5; left column: 1, 3, 5, with two cells blank as B and C.
- The number in cell A (addition table).
- The numbers in cells B and C (multiplication table).
- In the addition table each entry is (left number) + (top number).
- In the multiplication table each entry is (left number) x (top number).
- Across a row and down a column the values change by a constant step.
Plan
#5 Look for a Pattern · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Each table cell follows a simple rule (sum or product of its row and column heads), and reading along a row or column shows a constant step, so I find the pattern and fill each blank by its row and column heads.
Execute
Review
In the addition table the row 6, 8, 10 and column 8, A, 10... all step by 2, so A = 10 is consistent. In the multiplication table 9 and 25 are the products 3x3 and 5x5, both matching the row-times-column rule.
Instead of the sum/product rule, you could extend each row and column by its constant step (addition table +2, multiplication rows +1x, +3x, +5x) and read where the blanks fall.
Standards · min grade 3
3.OA.D.9Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Recognizing the constant row/column steps in the addition and multiplication tables to fill the blanks.