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Reasoning Puzzles: Multiplication Enrichment Activities for Math Talk
Reasoning Puzzles: Multiplication Enrichment Activities for Math Talk
Reasoning Puzzles: Multiplication Enrichment Activities for Math Talk
Reasoning Puzzles: Multiplication Enrichment Activities for Math Talk
Reasoning Puzzles: Multiplication Enrichment Activities for Math Talk
Reasoning Puzzles: Multiplication Enrichment Activities for Math Talk
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Reasoning Puzzles: Multiplication Enrichment Activities for Math Talk
Reasoning Puzzles: Multiplication Enrichment Activities for Math Talk
Reasoning Puzzles: Multiplication Enrichment Activities for Math Talk
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What others say

"I love using these for math talks. The students are very much engaged in discussing each statement to determine if they are true or false. Highly recommend these!"
star
Brittany R.

Description

In these no prep true/false multiplication puzzles, students practice multiplication concepts using repeated addition, equal groups, arrays and multiplication expressions. These are awesome tasks for when students need enrichment, or to use in a small group for your students who might be struggling with the concepts.

These also work great as math warm ups, centers, or early finisher activities! There are 10 no prep puzzles are easy to print and just hand out for instant engagement. In this activity, students decide for themselves whether six statements are true/false about a given puzzle. You can then have them engage in math talk to defend their thinking, and critique the reasoning of others. The puzzles get more difficult as you go for easy differentiation as well.

They will sort true and false statements with a picture puzzle that explores:

Puzzle #1: repeated addition as a number sentence

Puzzle #2: single digit multiplication represented by an array

Puzzle #3: equal groups of dots

Puzzle #4: rectangular array where some dots are hiding

Puzzle #5: equal groups where only one group is showing

Puzzle #6: equal groups with larger amounts to multiply

Puzzle #7: multiplication on a number line as repeated addition

Puzzle #8: equal groups where dots are hiding on each group

Puzzle #9: two rectangular arrays side by side

Puzzle #10: multiplication equations and expressions

This no prep true and false sort is perfect for fast finishers who need math enrichment activities and problem solving opportunities. Your early finishers will be engaged when they have extra class time in a meaningful way, either working with a partner or small group. They are a little bit like word problems requiring careful reading, and they require critical thinking and promote a deeper understanding of multiplication.

You could have your whole class do this as well for a math warm up to get those math skills ready to go in their brains. Some students may do well with mental math, but it would be a great idea to provide tools/manipulatives for students that may struggle. The visuals connect to real-world math problems as well, with all kinds of real life application.

Please see the preview video to watch the problem-solving skills required to implement this in the best way possible. Create strong mathematicians who beg for more of these puzzles!

Why work on reasoning activities?

The Standards for Mathematical Practice put a focus on the thinking processes of students. There is also some pretty strong research suggesting that students should be engaged in student to student math talk for at least 65% of your math lesson. Giving students these tasks allows them to form their own thoughts, and then work with a team to defend their thinking. If you make it a regular part of your classroom routine (once a week or every other week) students will become more comfortable with math talk.

The puzzles are also fantastic problem solving, critical thinking and deduction activities. This is also a wonderful test prep activity for state testing!

How long does this activity last?

Depending on the ability level of your students, each individual activity can take anywhere from 15 to 30 minutes. There are 10 total puzzles with 6 prompts each in this resource.

How do I assess this project?

You can assess what the students do individually if you have them glue their strips to the true/ false template. If you pull together small groups, you could also assess students on their group work skills and level of participation in their group.

How and when do you use this problem type in class?

There are many ways you can use this activity:

 - Fast finisher activity

 - Morning work

 - Intervention block activity

 - Small group work

 - Homework for students

 - Gifted and talented small groups

 - Whole class activity

 - Parent volunteers can work one on one

 - Center activity

Included in this resource:

1. Information for the teacher pages: CCSS alignment, and a sample lesson plan.

2. True/False Template.

3. 10 puzzles, and 10 answer keys with explanations for the false statements. The puzzles get more difficult as you continue.

These puzzles are challenging, and fun! If you have any questions, or find any problems with your purchase, please contact me as soon as possible so that I may fix any errors.

If you like this activity, try out my other reasoning puzzles:

Reasoning Puzzles: Activities to Engage in Math Talk

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

Reasoning Puzzles: Multiplication Enrichment Activities for Math Talk

Beyond Traditional Math
3.7k Followers
$3.50

Highlights

Digital downloads
Grades icon
Grades
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Standards
Pages
27
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
2 Weeks

What others say

"I love using these for math talks. The students are very much engaged in discussing each statement to determine if they are true or false. Highly recommend these!"
star
Brittany R.

Description

In these no prep true/false multiplication puzzles, students practice multiplication concepts using repeated addition, equal groups, arrays and multiplication expressions. These are awesome tasks for when students need enrichment, or to use in a small group for your students who might be struggling with the concepts.

These also work great as math warm ups, centers, or early finisher activities! There are 10 no prep puzzles are easy to print and just hand out for instant engagement. In this activity, students decide for themselves whether six statements are true/false about a given puzzle. You can then have them engage in math talk to defend their thinking, and critique the reasoning of others. The puzzles get more difficult as you go for easy differentiation as well.

They will sort true and false statements with a picture puzzle that explores:

Puzzle #1: repeated addition as a number sentence

Puzzle #2: single digit multiplication represented by an array

Puzzle #3: equal groups of dots

Puzzle #4: rectangular array where some dots are hiding

Puzzle #5: equal groups where only one group is showing

Puzzle #6: equal groups with larger amounts to multiply

Puzzle #7: multiplication on a number line as repeated addition

Puzzle #8: equal groups where dots are hiding on each group

Puzzle #9: two rectangular arrays side by side

Puzzle #10: multiplication equations and expressions

This no prep true and false sort is perfect for fast finishers who need math enrichment activities and problem solving opportunities. Your early finishers will be engaged when they have extra class time in a meaningful way, either working with a partner or small group. They are a little bit like word problems requiring careful reading, and they require critical thinking and promote a deeper understanding of multiplication.

You could have your whole class do this as well for a math warm up to get those math skills ready to go in their brains. Some students may do well with mental math, but it would be a great idea to provide tools/manipulatives for students that may struggle. The visuals connect to real-world math problems as well, with all kinds of real life application.

Please see the preview video to watch the problem-solving skills required to implement this in the best way possible. Create strong mathematicians who beg for more of these puzzles!

Why work on reasoning activities?

The Standards for Mathematical Practice put a focus on the thinking processes of students. There is also some pretty strong research suggesting that students should be engaged in student to student math talk for at least 65% of your math lesson. Giving students these tasks allows them to form their own thoughts, and then work with a team to defend their thinking. If you make it a regular part of your classroom routine (once a week or every other week) students will become more comfortable with math talk.

The puzzles are also fantastic problem solving, critical thinking and deduction activities. This is also a wonderful test prep activity for state testing!

How long does this activity last?

Depending on the ability level of your students, each individual activity can take anywhere from 15 to 30 minutes. There are 10 total puzzles with 6 prompts each in this resource.

How do I assess this project?

You can assess what the students do individually if you have them glue their strips to the true/ false template. If you pull together small groups, you could also assess students on their group work skills and level of participation in their group.

How and when do you use this problem type in class?

There are many ways you can use this activity:

 - Fast finisher activity

 - Morning work

 - Intervention block activity

 - Small group work

 - Homework for students

 - Gifted and talented small groups

 - Whole class activity

 - Parent volunteers can work one on one

 - Center activity

Included in this resource:

1. Information for the teacher pages: CCSS alignment, and a sample lesson plan.

2. True/False Template.

3. 10 puzzles, and 10 answer keys with explanations for the false statements. The puzzles get more difficult as you continue.

These puzzles are challenging, and fun! If you have any questions, or find any problems with your purchase, please contact me as soon as possible so that I may fix any errors.

If you like this activity, try out my other reasoning puzzles:

Reasoning Puzzles: Activities to Engage in Math Talk

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

Reviews

5.0
Rated 4.96 out of 5, based on 149 reviews
149
ratings
5
147
4
2
3
0
2
0
1
0
Mostly used with 3rd grade
Reviews
1
1
1
2
5
2
1
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K
1st
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3rd
4th
5th
All verified TPT purchases
great resource
Rated 5 out of 5
July 14, 2026
Another fantastic resource! It was simple to use, kept my students actively involved, and made teaching this skill much easier. I appreciate the time and effort that went into creating such a practical and effective product. Highly recommend!
Laura Rebmann
(TPT Seller)
1,441 reviews • Illinois
Grades taught: PreK, K, 1st, 2nd
Great resource
Rated 5 out of 5
March 14, 2026
A really nice resource to use for students in an enrichment group.
Teach With Jeanine
(TPT Seller)
491 reviews • New York
Grades taught: 3rd
Great Math Talk
Rated 5 out of 5
February 10, 2026
I love using these for math talks. The students are very much engaged in discussing each statement to determine if they are true or false. Highly recommend these!
Brittany Rohrig
(TPT Seller)
98 reviews • West Virginia
Grades taught: 3rd
Rated 5 out of 5
January 1, 2023
A handy low prep resource, that my students very much enjoyed!
Tammy M.
384 reviews
Grades taught: 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th
Student populations: Autism, Learning difficulties, Mild to severe disabilities
Rated 5 out of 5
October 20, 2022
These are great for starting math talk discussions with your students.
567 reviews
Grades taught: 4th
Rated 5 out of 5
February 12, 2022
These were perfect for small group conversations regarding different models of multiplication and division.
414 reviews
Grades taught: 3rd
Rated 4 out of 5
June 4, 2021
Students worked in pairs to solve these puzzles, and had a lot of fun!
Wendy M.
59 reviews
Grades taught: 2nd
Rated 5 out of 5
March 26, 2021
I used this as an enrichment activity for a couple of advanced third graders. They enjoyed it and requested more.
Nichole Peterson
(TPT Seller)
122 reviews
Grades taught: 3rd

Questions & Answers

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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Recognize area as an attribute of plane figures and understand concepts of area measurement.
A square with side length 1 unit, called “a unit square,” is said to have “one square unit” of area, and can be used to measure area.
Relate area to the operations of multiplication and addition.
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