
Lesson
Arrays as Rows and Columns
Students learn to read arrays as equal rows and columns and count them in an organized way.
Arrays as Rows and Columns
What students learn
Students learn that an array is an arrangement of equal rows and columns. They practice noticing how many rows there are and how many items are in each row. Start with Arrays: See Rows and Columns in a Multiplication Model to introduce the idea, then move into Arrays: Count One Row at a Time so students can count in an organized way.
Why it matters
Arrays help students see multiplication instead of memorizing it as a trick. When students can picture rows and columns, they can understand why a multiplication fact works. Use Arrays: Build Equal Rows and Columns to show that the same total can be read by rows or by columns.
Learn the idea
An array has equal groups lined up neatly. The rows go across and the columns go up and down. If there are 3 rows with 4 in each row, the array has 12 total objects. Watch Arrays: Count the Columns to Find the Total to compare column counting with row counting, then use Multiplication Sentences: Match the Picture to the Equation and ask students to say the array as a multiplication fact.
Try it
Draw a 2-by-5 array, a 3-by-4 array, and a 4-by-3 array. Ask the student to count by rows first, then by columns, and explain why the total stays the same. If they want another model, replay Multiplication Sentences: Use Rows and Columns as Factors and have them point to the factors in the picture.
Parent guide
Use counters, stickers, coins, or cereal pieces. Arrange the objects in neat rows and have the child count one row aloud before counting the rest. If the child loses track, cover already-counted rows with a finger or card. Keep the language simple: row, column, total, and equal groups.