Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Fractions: What They Mean, and Equivalent Forms

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Fractions: What They Mean, and Equivalent Forms"— Presentation transcript:

1 Fractions: What They Mean, and Equivalent Forms

2 Fractions = Parts “taken” Total (=) Parts in a Whole “A whole”
One out of two parts

3 Fractions = Parts “taken” Total (=) Parts in a Whole “A whole”
One out of three parts

4 Fractions = Parts “taken” Total (=) Parts in a Whole “A whole”
Two out of three parts So any time the numerator (top) is smaller than the denominator (bottom), the fraction has a value lower than 1.

5 Fractions on a Number Line
1

6 Equivalent Fractions Four out of six parts Two out of three parts
is identical to If each part of the whole is cut in two, we see why.

7 Equivalent Fractions We make equivalent fractions by multiplying the numerator and denominator of any fraction BY THE SAME NUMBER. Ex: Find a fraction equivalent to that has an 12 in the denominator. Sneaky form of 1

8 Equivalent Fractions Four out of six parts Two out of three parts
is identical to If pairs of small parts are considered bigger parts, we see why.

9 Equivalent Fractions We can also make equivalent fractions by dividing the numerator and denominator of a fraction by the SAME NUMBER. Ex: Reduce to lowest terms. Sneaky form of 1

10 Comparing Fractions >
Unit fractions can be compared by looking at the denominators… …the bigger the denominator, the smaller the fraction. >

11 Comparing Fractions >
Non-Unit fractions can be compared by a few different ways, for now, we’ll give them the same denominators. In that condition, the smaller the numerator, the smaller the value. >


Download ppt "Fractions: What They Mean, and Equivalent Forms"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google