4.OA.1: Multiplicative Comparisons
I can interpret a multiplication equation as a comparison and represent verbal statements as multiplication equations.
What Your Child Needs to Know
This standard focuses on helping your child understand and use multiplicative comparisons. In 4th grade, students learn that multiplication can be used to compare quantities, not just to find the total of equal groups.
For example, when we say "Sarah is 3 times as tall as her baby brother," we're using multiplication to compare their heights. If her baby brother is 2 feet tall, then Sarah is 3 × 2 = 6 feet tall.
Understanding multiplicative comparisons helps your child solve more complex word problems and builds a foundation for proportional reasoning in later grades.
Real World Practice
Visual models and hands-on activitiesVisual Models for Multiplicative Comparisons
These visual models help your child understand what "times as many" means:
1. Arrays
Draw rows and columns of dots or squares. For example, to show 3 × 4 = 12, draw 3 rows with 4 dots in each row, then explain that 12 is 3 times as many as 4.
2. Number Lines
Use number lines to show jumps of equal size. For example, to show 5 × 3 = 15, draw a number line and make 5 jumps of size 3.
3. Tape Diagrams
Draw rectangles to show one quantity is a multiple of another. For example, to show 4 × 6 = 24, draw a small rectangle labeled "6" and a larger rectangle 4 times as long labeled "24".
Everyday Comparison Activities
1. Comparison Scavenger Hunt
Look for multiplicative comparisons around your home: "This bookshelf has 3 times as many books as that one." "Dad's shoes are 2 times as long as yours."
2. Grocery Store Comparisons
At the store, find examples of multiplicative comparisons: "This package has 4 times as many apples as that one." "This bottle is 2 times as tall as this one."
3. Drawing Comparisons
Draw pictures showing multiplication comparisons. For example, draw a tall tree that is 5 times as tall as a small tree.
Quick Checks
Strategies and quick activitiesWhen Your Child Struggles
1. Use Concrete Objects
Use small objects like buttons or counters to physically show the comparison. For example, "This pile has 4 times as many buttons as that pile."
2. Practice Verbal Descriptions
Have your child practice saying multiplication equations as comparisons: "6 × 3 = 18 means 18 is 6 times as many as 3."
3. Highlight the Difference
Clearly explain the difference between "times as many" (multiplication) and "times more than" (multiplication plus the original amount).
5-Minute Activities
Activity 1: Equation to Story
Give your child a multiplication equation (like 3 × 4 = 12) and have them create a comparison story: "The blue ribbon is 3 times as long as the red ribbon. The red ribbon is 4 inches long, so the blue ribbon is 12 inches long."
Activity 2: Story to Equation
Tell your child a comparison story and have them write the corresponding equation: "A whale weighs 8 times as much as an elephant. If an elephant weighs 5 tons, how much does the whale weigh?" (8 × 5 = 40)
Activity 3: Both Ways Practice
For any multiplication fact, practice saying it both ways: "4 × 6 = 24 means 24 is 4 times as many as 6, and 24 is also 6 times as many as 4."
Check Progress
Track improvementMid-Year Expectations
By the middle of the school year, your child should be able to:
- Explain that 4 × 7 = 28 means 28 is 4 times as many as 7
- Translate simple comparison statements into multiplication equations
- Draw basic visual models to represent multiplicative comparisons
End-of-Year Expectations
By the end of the school year, your child should be able to:
- Explain that 4 × 7 = 28 means both "28 is 4 times as many as 7" and "28 is 7 times as many as 4"
- Create a multiplication equation from any comparison statement
- Create a comparison statement from any multiplication equation
- Draw detailed visual models to represent multiplicative comparisons
Signs of Mastery
Your child has mastered this standard when they can:
- Consistently translate between verbal multiplicative comparisons and multiplication equations
- Distinguish between "times as many" and "times more than" in word problems
- Create their own multiplicative comparison problems
- Apply multiplicative comparison understanding to solve complex problems
- Explain their reasoning using precise mathematical language
Questions to Ask:
- "If 5 × 9 = 45, what does that tell us about the relationship between 5, 9, and 45?"
- "How would you write an equation for 'The elephant weighs 20 times as much as the dog'?"
- "Can you draw a picture to show that 24 is 6 times as many as 4?"
Differentiation
Support for all learning levelsBelow Grade Level
For students who need additional support with basic multiplication concepts and simple comparisons.
📥 Download Practice WorksheetAt Grade Level
For students who need practice with grade-level multiplication comparison problems.
📥 Download Grade Level WorksheetAbove Grade Level
For students ready for more challenging multiplication comparison problems and applications.
📥 Download Challenge Worksheet