The Window Method for Multiplication

The recipient of a master’s in curriculum and instruction and a PhD in educational leadership from National Louis University, Hilary Agnello is an Illinois-based math teacher who has taught at McHenry County College since 2014. Prior to this role, Hilary Agnello taught math at the middle school level, giving students strategies to make math easier.

One of the more popular strategies for completing multi-digit multiplication without the use of a calculator is the window/box method, which is also referred to as the area model. A common introductory method to the more advanced partial products strategy, the window method prompts students to create a window with a number of rows and columns that reflect the number of digits in the problem’s factors. For instance, if multiplying 47 by 24, the student would create a box with 2 rows and 2 columns. The factors of each problem would then be placed along the top and sides of the box — 40 and 7 along the top, and 20 and 4 down the side.

The trick is then to multiply the numbers that meet in the corresponding four spaces. For example, the student would multiply 40 by 20 in the upper left box, 7 by 20 in the upper right box, 40 by 4 in the bottom left box, and 7 by 4 in the bottom right box. The products from each equation are then added together to get the result of the original 47×24 problem.

Penn State Women’s Volleyball Freshmen Thriving in 2018

 

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Women’s Volleyball
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An educational leadership PhD candidate at National Louis University, Hilary Agnello draws upon more than a decade of experience in her role as a math instructor at McHenry County College. Before receiving a master’s degree in curriculum and instruction, Hilary Agnello earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematics at Penn State University, where she was a member of the school’s national championship-winning volleyball team.

The fourth-ranked team in the country, Penn State boasts a win-loss record of 18-4 as of October 30 and has been excelling in part due to the performance of its first-year players. In mid-October, Jonni Parker earned her second Big Ten Freshman of the Week honor after leading the Nittany Lions to wins over top-20 teams Purdue and Nebraska. In those two games, Parker registered a combined 26 kills, 15 digs, and 4 blocks.

Parker isn’t the only Penn State first-year player to receive the honor, as both Serena Gray and Kaitlyn Hord were named Big Ten Freshman of the Week earlier in the season. Additionally, at the beginning of October Kendall White was named the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week.