Unit 5 Fractions as Numbers (Family Materials)
In this unit, students develop an understanding of fractions as numbers. They represent fractions with diagrams and number lines and compare and find equivalent fractions.
Near the end of the unit, ask your student to show the fractions
Questions that may be helpful as they work:
How did you determine how many partitions needed to be made?
How did you know how many parts to shade in?
How did you know where to place the fraction on the number line?
Which fraction is larger? How do you know?
Section A Introduction to Fractions
In this section, students use diagrams and fraction strips to learn about fractions.
In grade 2, they learned about halves, thirds, and fourths. Now, they partition 1 whole into 6 or 8 parts, describe each part as “a sixth” and “an eighth,” and write the notation
Students learn that the notation
In these diagrams, each part is a unit fraction with the size
Students see that composing unit fractions create non-unit fractions (fractions with numerators greater than 1). For example, putting together 3 parts of
Section B Fractions on the Number Line
In this section, students locate fractions on the number line. They learn that, just like whole numbers, fractions can be represented as distances from 0 on the number line.
Students partition the interval from 0 to 1 into b equal parts. They label the first tick mark with a unit fraction
Then, students locate non-unit fractions on the number line by counting unit fractions. They notice that certain fractions are in the same location as whole numbers on the number line.
For example,
The terms “numerator” and “denominator” are introduced here.
Section C Equivalent Fractions
In this section, students learn that equivalent fractions are fractions that are the same size. They use fraction strips and diagrams to show and find equivalent fractions.
The shaded parts of the diagrams show that
The number line diagram shows that
Section D Fraction Comparisons
In this section, students compare fractions. They learn that comparisons are only valid if the fractions being compared refer to the same whole.
Students first compare fractions with the same denominator (such as
Then, they compare fractions with the same numerator (such as