Stage 7 · Algebraic Expressions & Polynomials

7.7  Dividing Expressions

Running powers and multiplication in reverse: dividing powers, zero and negative exponents, and a first look at factoring.

For ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 5 of 5 in this lesson: 7.7.5 A bridge to factoring

7.7.5 A bridge to factoring

Step back and look at what division has shown you. When you divided (6x2 + 8x) ÷ 2x you got 3x + 4. Read that the other way and it says something striking: 2x times (3x + 4) gives back 6x2 + 8x. Division has quietly handed you a way to rewrite a sum as a product.

That is the whole idea of factoring. Multiplying (or expanding) takes a product and spreads it out into a sum: 2x(3x+4) = 6x2+8x. Factoring runs that same arrow backward: it looks at the sum 6x2+8x, finds what every term has in common, and pulls that shared factor out front to write the sum as a product again.

Finding what to pull out is pure division. Each term holds a copy of 2x: 6x2 = 2x · 3x and 8x = 2x · 4. The shared piece 2x is the greatest common factor; what is left after you divide each term by it goes inside the parentheses.

2x(3x+4) a product 6x2+8x a sum expand → (multiply out) ← factor (pull out 2x)
One bridge, two directions. Expanding turns the product into a sum; factoring turns the sum back into a product by pulling out the shared 2x.
Worked example — factor by pulling out the common factor

Factor 6x2 + 8x.

  1. Find the greatest common factor of the two terms. Numbers: GCF of 6 and 8 is 2. Letters: both have at least one x, so x. Together: 2x. the biggest piece every term shares
  2. Divide each term by 2x: 6x2 ÷ 2x = 3x and 8x ÷ 2x = 4. this is just section 7.7.4
  3. Write the GCF out front, the leftovers in parentheses: 2x(3x + 4). check by expanding: 2x·3x + 2x·4 = 6x² + 8x ✓
Coming up next — the next stop

You have just taken your first factoring step: pulling out a common factor. Factoring is the engine behind simplifying fractions of expressions and solving equations, and there is much more to it — grouping, special patterns, and trinomials. The reverse trip you glimpsed here is the road ahead.

🎮 Try it Bridge to factoring — both directions

Flip the toggle to run the bridge either way: expand the product into a sum, or factor the sum back into a product by pulling out the common 2x.

Direction
Inside number 4
eastmath.com · 7.7 Dividing Expressions · 7.7.5 A bridge to factoring