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Multiplication x10

Lesson

Think back to the place value table. What did you notice about the columns? Well, each one is bigger than the one before it. $10$10 units make a ten, $10$10 tens make a hundred, $10$10 hundreds make a thousand and so on, as shown in the picture below.

So when we multiply a number by $10$10, we make it ten times bigger, which means the number moves up a place in the place value table.

Did you know?

A quick way to multiply any whole number by $10$10 is to add a $0$0 at the end.

That moves all our numbers up one place in the place value table, with the $0$0 as a place holder in the units column.

However, this rule is ONLY true for whole numbers, so you have to be careful once fractions or decimals are involved.

Worked Example

Question 1

$10\times4$10×4

Outcomes

NA2-1

Use simple additive strategies with whole numbers and fractions

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