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Published byBryce Marren Modified over 9 years ago
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Decimats I am learning to identify equivalent fractions and to name fractions as decimals. Equivalent means equal or the same.
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Below is a sheet of paper that has been folded in half
Below is a sheet of paper that has been folded in half. One half has been shaded red. is red Now I am going to fold the paper in half again. You can see it is now cut into quarters. 2 quarters of the paper is shaded red. You can see from this that is the same as They are equivalent. Can you spot any pattern between these fractions? X 2 The numerator is twice as big. X 2 The denominator is twice as big.
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Below is a sheet of paper that has been folded into thirds
Below is a sheet of paper that has been folded into thirds. One third has been shaded red. is red Now I am going to fold the paper two more times so that it is in ninths. You can see it is now cut into ninths. 3 ninths of the paper is shaded red. You can see from this that is the same as They are equivalent. Can you spot any pattern between these fractions? X 3 The numerator is three times as big. X 3 The denominator is three times as big.
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Now lets try to work out how many tenths, hundredths and thousandths some fractions are equivalent to. of the shape below is red. How we could change this shape into tenths? By folding it in half you can see that is equivalent to X 2 Now let’s change into hundredths. We can do this by splitting each of the tenths into ten pieces. That means the whole shape will be split into hundredths. So every tenth would look like this. There are 4 red tenths so 4 X 10 = 40 X 2 X 10
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Let’s go one step further and work out how many thousandths this is the same as.
This was Then we changed it into Then we changed it into by splitting each piece into ten more pieces. If we split every hundredth into ten pieces we would then have made thousandths. There are 40 hundredths. If we split every one on these hundredths into ten pieces we would have 400 thousandths. 40 X 10 = 400. so…. X 2 X 10 X 10
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Notice how if you multiply the numerator and the denominator by the same amount you always get an equivalent fraction. This is helpful when you are trying to change a fraction into tenths, hundredths or thousandths so you can show it as a decimal. X2 0.6 X4 0.08 X5 0.45
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Now try these questions on your own.
Click again when you have worked out all your answers. 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) = 6) 7) 8) 9) 10) = = = = = = = = = Need some more practise? Try Pg30 & 31 of Teacher Tools Fractions, Decimals and Percentages Book Numeracy resources
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