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Calculating with fractions

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visibility 46update a month agobookmarkshare

🎯 In this topic you will

  • Estimate and add fractions with the same denominator (within one whole).
  • Estimate and subtract fractions with the same denominator (within one whole).
  • Solve a range of fraction problems using these skills.
 

🧠 Key Words

  • decreased
  • original
Show Definitions
  • decreased: Became smaller in value or amount; in mathematics, this means a quantity has been reduced.
  • original: The starting value or amount before any changes such as adding, subtracting, or decreasing.
 

🔢 Fractions Are Numbers Too

You can add and subtract fractions because fractions are numbers too. Finding a fraction of a whole has the effect of decreasing the original value.

 

🛍️ How Sales Reduce Prices

In a sale, prices are decreased so that you can buy what you wish for less.

 

EXERCISES

1. What addition is shown on this diagram?

👀 Show answer
The diagram shows $\dfrac{4}{10}+\dfrac{3}{10}=\dfrac{7}{10}$. It is not $\dfrac{7}{70}$ because when denominators are the same, you add only the numerators and keep the denominator.

2. Use diagrams or fraction strips to help you complete each addition. Estimate before you calculate. Draw a ring around your estimate.

a. $\dfrac{1}{3}+\dfrac{1}{3}=$   estimate: $<\dfrac{1}{2},=\dfrac{1}{2},>\dfrac{1}{2}$

b. $\dfrac{2}{5}+\dfrac{2}{5}=$   estimate: $<\dfrac{1}{2},=\dfrac{1}{2},>\dfrac{1}{2}$

c. $\dfrac{2}{10}+\dfrac{3}{10}=$   estimate: $<\dfrac{1}{2},=\dfrac{1}{2},>\dfrac{1}{2}$

d. $\dfrac{1}{2}+\dfrac{1}{4}=$   estimate: $<\dfrac{1}{2},=\dfrac{1}{2},>\dfrac{1}{2}$

👀 Show answer
a. $\dfrac{2}{3}$ (estimate $>\dfrac{1}{2}$)
b. $\dfrac{4}{5}$ (estimate $>\dfrac{1}{2}$)
c. $\dfrac{5}{10}=\dfrac{1}{2}$ (estimate $=\dfrac{1}{2}$)
d. $\dfrac{3}{4}$ (estimate $>\dfrac{1}{2}$)

3. Find all the possible solutions for this calculation.

$\dfrac{\square}{4}+\dfrac{\square}{4}=1$

👀 Show answer
The numerators must add to $4$. Possible pairs are $(0,4)$, $(1,3)$, $(2,2)$, $(3,1)$, $(4,0)$.

4. What subtraction is shown on this diagram?

👀 Show answer
$\dfrac{4}{5}-\dfrac{1}{5}=\dfrac{3}{5}$.

5. Use diagrams or fraction strips to help you complete each subtraction. Estimate before you calculate. Draw a ring around your estimate.

a. $\dfrac{2}{3}-\dfrac{2}{3}=$   estimate: $<\dfrac{1}{2},=\dfrac{1}{2},>\dfrac{1}{2}$

b. $\dfrac{3}{5}-\dfrac{2}{5}=$   estimate: $<\dfrac{1}{2},=\dfrac{1}{2},>\dfrac{1}{2}$

c. $1-\dfrac{3}{10}=$   estimate: $<\dfrac{1}{2},=\dfrac{1}{2},>\dfrac{1}{2}$

d. $1-\dfrac{3}{4}=$   estimate: $<\dfrac{1}{2},=\dfrac{1}{2},>\dfrac{1}{2}$

👀 Show answer
a. $0$ (estimate $<\dfrac{1}{2}$)
b. $\dfrac{1}{5}$ (estimate $<\dfrac{1}{2}$)
c. $\dfrac{7}{10}$ (estimate $>\dfrac{1}{2}$)
d. $\dfrac{1}{4}$ (estimate $<\dfrac{1}{2}$)

6. Find all the possible solutions for this calculation.

$1-\dfrac{\square}{5}=\dfrac{\square}{5}$

👀 Show answer
If the first numerator is $a$, the second is $5-a$. Possible pairs are $(0,5)$, $(1,4)$, $(2,3)$, $(3,2)$, $(4,1)$, $(5,0)$.
 

🧠 Think like a Mathematician

Hien explored adding thirds to make $1$ and subtracting thirds from $1$. He made this table.

Thirds
Addition to make $1$ Subtraction from $1$
$\dfrac{0}{3}+\dfrac{3}{3}=\dfrac{3}{3}=1$ $1-\dfrac{3}{3}=\dfrac{3}{3}=0$
$\dfrac{1}{3}+\dfrac{2}{3}=\dfrac{3}{3}=1$ $1-\dfrac{2}{3}=\dfrac{1}{3}$
  $1-\dfrac{1}{3}=\dfrac{2}{3}$
  $1-\dfrac{0}{3}=\dfrac{3}{3}=1$

Hien says, “There are twice as many subtractions as there are additions. I wonder if that is true for other fractions too?” What do you think. Give some examples.

Show Answers
  • Pattern: For thirds, there are $2$ ways to add to make $1$ but $4$ subtraction results from $1$ (using $0/3,1/3,2/3,3/3$).
  • Why: When adding to make $1$, only pairs that sum to the denominator work (for thirds: $0+3$ and $1+2$). For subtraction, every possible numerator from $0$ to the denominator gives a result.
  • Example (fifths): Additions to make $1$: $0/5+5/5$, $1/5+4/5$, $2/5+3/5$$3$ additions. Subtractions from $1$: $1-n/5$ for $n=0,1,2,3,4,5$$6$ subtractions.
  • Conclusion: Yes — for fractions with denominator $d$, there are $\dfrac{d+1}{2}$ addition pairs (rounded down) but $d+1$ subtraction results. So subtraction cases are always about twice as many.
 
📘 Worked example

A clothes shop is having a sale. The price of a pair of trousers is reduced by $\dfrac{1}{10}$.

What is the cost of a $30$ dollar pair of trousers now?

Answer:

a. Find $\dfrac{1}{10}$ of $30$.

$\dfrac{1}{10}\times 30 = 3$

b. Subtract this from the original price.

$30-3=27$

Final answer: The trousers now cost $27$ dollars.

The trousers cost $\dfrac{1}{10}$ less than before the sale.

This means the new price is $1-\dfrac{1}{10}=\dfrac{9}{10}$ of the original price.

You can either subtract $\dfrac{1}{10}$ of $30$, or find $\dfrac{9}{10}$ of $30$:

$\dfrac{9}{10}\times 30=27$

Both methods give the same result.

 

EXERCISES

7. A clothes shop is having a sale. All prices are reduced by $\dfrac{1}{4}$. How much does each item cost now?

👀 Show answer
Since prices are reduced by $\dfrac{1}{4}$, each new price is $\dfrac{3}{4}$ of the original.

a. $\dfrac{3}{4}\times 8=6$
b. $\dfrac{3}{4}\times 4=3$
c. $\dfrac{3}{4}\times 32=24$
d. $\dfrac{3}{4}\times 20=15$
 

📘 What we've learned

  • We learned to estimate answers before calculating to check if results are reasonable (within one whole).
  • We added fractions with the same denominator using $\dfrac{a}{b}+\dfrac{c}{b}=\dfrac{a+c}{b}$.
  • We subtracted fractions with the same denominator using $\dfrac{a}{b}-\dfrac{c}{b}=\dfrac{a-c}{b}$.
  • We understood that when denominators are equal, only the numerators change.
  • We solved real-life fraction problems, including finding a fraction of an amount and working out reduced prices using $\text{new price}=\left(1-\text{fraction}\right)\times \text{original price}$.

Related Past Papers

Related Tutorials

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