Intro to Multiplication
Multiplication represents repeated addition of equal groups, where 4 × 3 means adding 4 three times or adding 3 four times. This fundamental arithmetic operation appears throughout the UK National Curriculum from Year 2 onwards, building from concrete examples with physical objects to abstract number work. The multiplication symbol (×) indicates how many groups and how many items per group.
Why it matters
Multiplication appears constantly in daily life — calculating the cost of 6 apples at 15p each, finding the area of a 4-metre by 7-metre room, or working out how many sweets to buy for 24 children with 3 each. In school mathematics, multiplication forms the foundation for division, fractions, percentages, and algebra. Year 6 SATs tests include multiplication within word problems and mental arithmetic. At GCSE level, multiplication underpins area calculations, compound interest, and probability trees. Children who master multiplication facts to 12 × 12 by Year 4 find later mathematics significantly easier, as these facts appear in fraction work, factorisation, and scientific calculations throughout secondary school.
How to solve intro to multiplication
Introduction to Multiplication & Division
- Multiplication is repeated addition: 4 × 3 means 4 + 4 + 4 (three groups of 4).
- Division is sharing equally: 12 ÷ 3 means split 12 into 3 equal groups.
- Use arrays and pictures to visualise the groups.
- Multiplication is commutative (3 × 4 = 4 × 3); division is not (12 ÷ 3 ≠ 3 ÷ 12).
Example: 3 × 4 = 4 + 4 + 4 = 12. And 12 ÷ 4 = 3.
Worked examples
5 groups of 2 stars. How many altogether?
Answer: 10
- Write as repeated addition → 2 + 2 + 2 + 2 + 2 = 10 — We have 5 groups, each with 2 stars. Adding 2 again and again: 2 + 2 + 2 + 2 + 2 = 10.
- Write as multiplication → 5 × 2 = 10 — Multiplication is a shortcut for repeated addition. Instead of adding 2 a total of 5 times, we write 5 × 2 = 10.
- Answer with units → 10 stars — There are 10 stars altogether.
There are 3 rows with 6 seats in each row. How many seats?
Answer: 18
- Picture the array → 3 rows × 6 seats — Imagine a grid: 3 rows across, 6 seats in each. An array helps us see multiplication as rows and columns.
- Multiply rows by columns → 3 × 6 = 18 — 3 × 6 = 18. Each row has 6, and there are 3 rows.
- Check by adding rows → 6 + 6 + 6 = 18 ✓ — Add 6 for each of the 3 rows: same answer! Correct.
Each jar has 3 sweets. There are 5 jars. How many sweets altogether?
Answer: 15
- Identify groups and size → 5 groups of 3 — We have 5 jars, each containing 3 sweets.
- Write as multiplication → 5 × 3 = 15 — Equal groups means multiplication: 5 × 3 = 15.
- Answer with units → 15 sweets — There are 15 sweets altogether.
Common mistakes
- Confusing the order in word problems, writing 3 × 5 = 8 when adding 3 + 5 instead of recognising 3 groups of 5
- Mixing up rows and columns in arrays, calculating 4 × 6 = 10 by counting only one row plus one column rather than all elements
- Writing 7 × 0 = 7 instead of 0, forgetting that any number multiplied by zero equals zero