We can make a division table just like we made a multiplication table. Division is surprisingly our most important operation in terms of most of the problems we solve in our daily lives. Division produces numbers we call fractions or rationals and functions we call ratios. With spreadsheets we concentrate on ratios and on the patterns of ratios.
Category: Multiply/Divide
Square Numbers
The square numbers form an interesting pattern on the times (multiplication) table. They run along a diagonal from 1 to the top right of the table separating the table into two halves. This is the first step in looking at patterns in the multiplication table. Students build a new square number table by using a rule and then graph that the square numbers. The square numbers form a parabola on a graph.
Magic Rectangle
Multiplication tables have some wonderful and quite surprising patterns. This is one of them. Draw any rectangle in a multiplication table and you will find that the products of opposite corners are equal. For example a rectangle around a full 12 by 12 table will be 1144 and 1212. Try it, is it always true? Why?
Products as Areas
Using the times table, students can see that products are always rectangles, and that they represent the area of that rectangle. They should explore the times table by playing with these rectangles whose sides are the factor of the products.
Lights Out
This is one of those math puzzles that come up in contests but which turn out to be quite interesting mathematically. Imagine a long hallway with lights in the ceiling, all on and each controlled by its own chain. A long line of people (as many as there are lights) walk down the hallway. The first one pulls every chain, the second one every other chain, the 3rd pulls every 3rd chain and so on. When all the people have walked down the hallway, what lights, if any, will still be lit? What more can you learn from this puzzle about multiplication?