28
Fraction Demonstrations

Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

2 ÷ 3 TAKE A THIRD OF WHAT HAS BEEN SLICED

Citation preview

Page 1: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

Fraction Demonstrations

Page 2: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

2 ÷ 3

1 2

Divide Each of these by 3

Page 3: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

2 ÷ 3

TAKEA

THIRDOF

WHATHAS

BEENSLICED

Page 4: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

2 ÷ 3

Page 5: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

2 ÷ 3=2/3

PUT THESE

TOGETHER

Page 6: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

Number Line Model of 23

Page 7: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

2/3 equals 8/12

=

Page 8: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

3 x 1/3

ONE

TWO

3 =1

Page 9: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

7 x 1/5COUNT THE GREEN

FIFTHS!

=1 2/5

Page 10: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

2/3 x 4ONE

TWO

THREE

FOUR8/3

Page 11: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

1/3 x 1/2 Overlap is 1 of 6 rectangles

=1/6

Page 12: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

2/3 x 4/5 Overlap is 8 of 15 rectangles

=8/15

Page 13: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

=(3 + 1/3) x (4 + 1/7) 3 x 4=12

3 x 1/7=3/71/3 x 4=4/3

1/3 x 1/7=1/21

3 1/3 x 4 1/7

We can keep track of total down here!

Page 14: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

3 1/3 x 4 1/7 =12 + 4/3 + 3/7 + 1/21

5 68 9

10 11 1213 14 15

16 17 18

19 20 21

A third is 7 small rectangles so 4/3 is 1

whole and 7 rectangles

A seventh is 3 small rectangles so we need 9

WE WILL MAGNIFY A BLUE

SQUARE IN ORDER TO COMBINE

FRACTIONAL PARTS

3rds by 7ths gives 21sts!

2 3147

=13 17/21

Page 15: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

3 1/3 x 4 1/7 =13 17/21

4 1/7 ONCETWICETHRICEA 3rd More

Page 16: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

I have 2 feet of board but I only need ¼ foot. What fraction of the board am I using?

2 FEET OF BOARD

¼ foot

Page 17: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

I have 2 feet of board but I only need ¼ foot. What fraction of the board am I using?

1 2 3 4 5 6 87

So you are only using an 8th of the board!

¼ ÷ 2 =1/8

Page 18: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

I want to divide 1/4th of a Pie among two people. How much does each person get?

Page 19: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

1/8th 1/8th

I get a Piece!

ME TOO!

¼ ÷ 2 =1/8

Page 20: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

21/2 ÷ 1/4

4 4 2

=10

Page 21: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

Context for

A tank leaks gallons of water every 15 minutes. What is the rate of leakage in gallons per hour?

Are ratios just like Fractions?

Page 22: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

Combining Ratios

• Bob Mows of a lawn in 15 minutes• Sam Mows of a lawn in 45 minutes IF they only have one lawn mower and each needs to rest after their stint, what is their rate per hour?

Page 23: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

Combining Ratios

THIS IS 1 LAWN per HOURYOU CAN’T DO THAT WITH

FRACTIONS!

Page 24: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

Combining Ratios

• Bob Mows of a lawn in 15 minutes• Sam Mows of a lawn in 45 minutes IF they each have one lawn mower and they can mow at this rate all day long then how do we see their combined rate?

Page 25: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

+ = = 2 Lawns Per Hour

Page 26: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

2/3 ÷ 2/6

1

= 2

1

Page 27: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

Demo 3/4 ÷ 2/3

1 Unit 3/4 Unit 2/3 Unit We will stuff the yellow into the blue!

Method of Gupta /Lamberg

Stuffed in already!

Waiting to stuff

Extra Capacity Unused

Stuff complete Goes One time i.e. 8 green

Rectangles!

=1 1/8=9/8

Unused Capacity

1 left over

This is 8GREEN

rectangles

Page 28: Fraction Demonstrations. 2 ÷ 3 1 2 Divide Each of these by 3

5/4 ÷ 4/5

1 Unit 5/4 4/5

How many times does yellow go into the 5/4 Blue Unit?

Goes 1 time which takes 16

rectangles

The result isOnce and 9 more squares

Method of Gupta /Lamberg

1234

5 6 7 8 9