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Comparing numbers

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visibility 8update 3 days agobookmarkshare

🎯 In this topic you will

  • Compare sets of objects and numbers using clear visual and numerical methods.
 

🧠 Key Words

  • compare
  • equal
  • less
  • fewer
  • more
  • same
Show Definitions
  • compare: To examine two or more sets or numbers to identify similarities and differences.
  • equal: Having the same quantity, number, or value as another set or number.
  • less: A smaller amount or value when comparing numbers or quantities.
  • fewer: A smaller number of individual items when counting separate objects.
  • more: A greater amount or number compared to another set or value.
  • same: Exactly equal in quantity, value, or number when compared.
 

🔍 Comparing Different Sets

You can compare different sets. You can find out which set has more, fewer, or the same number of objects as another set.

 

📊 Understanding Fewer and More

Fewer means the same as less. More means the same as greater.

 
📘 Worked example

Compare the two sets. Look for what is the same or different. Tick ✓ the set that has more objects.

 

Answer:

The top row has $5$ shapes and the bottom row has $4$ shapes.
Since $5 > 4$, the top row has more objects.
Tick the top row.

I can match each shape in one row with a shape in the other row.

There is no match for the last shape in the top row, so there are more shapes in the top row than in the bottom row.

This means $5$ is greater than $4$, so I tick the top row.

 

EXERCISES

1. Compare the sets. Tick the set that has fewer objects.

👀 Show answer
The first set has $2$ cubes and the second set has $4$ cubes. $2 < 4$, so tick the set with $2$ cubes.

2. Compare the sets. Tick the set that has fewer objects.

👀 Show answer
The left set has $6$ stars and the right set has $8$ stars. $6 < 8$, so tick the set with $6$ stars.

3. Compare the sets. Tick the set that has more objects.

👀 Show answer
The left set has $9$ flowers and the right set has $7$ flowers. $9 > 7$, so tick the set with $9$ flowers.

4. Compare the sets. Tick the sets that have the same number of objects.

👀 Show answer
There are $6$ blue counters, $8$ flowers, $8$ cubes, and $9$ bananas. The sets with the same number are the flowers and the cubes because both have $8$ objects.

5. Compare the sets. Complete the sentences.

👀 Show answer
There are $7$ bananas.
There are $9$ oranges.
There are more $\text{oranges}$ than $\text{bananas}$, so there are fewer $\text{bananas}$ than $\text{oranges}$.

6. Compare the sets. Complete the sentences.

👀 Show answer
There are $9$ spiders.
There are $7$ snails.
There are fewer $\text{snails}$ than $\text{spiders}$ so there are more $\text{spiders}$ than $\text{snails}$.
$7 < 9$.

7. Look at question 6. How many more spiders than snails? How many fewer snails than spiders?

👀 Show answer
There are $2$ more spiders than snails.
There are $2$ fewer snails than spiders because $9 - 7 = 2$.

8. Write a number that is greater than $4$.

👀 Show answer
One possible answer is $5$ because $5 > 4$.

9. Write a number that is less than $5$.

👀 Show answer
One possible answer is $4$ because $4 < 5$.
 

🧠 Think like a Mathematician

Activity: Investigate what happens when you keep adding $1$ object and then keep taking away $1$ object.

Method:

  1. Take $3$ objects.
  2. Take $1$ more. How many do you have now?
  3. Take $1$ more. How many do you have now?
  4. Keep adding $1$ object each time until you have $10$ objects. Notice what happens to the number each time.
  5. When you have $10$ objects, put $1$ back. How many do you have now?
  6. Put another $1$ back. How many do you have now?
  7. Keep taking away $1$ object each time until you have $0$ objects left. Notice what happens to the number each time.

Follow-up Questions:

1. What happens to the number each time you add $1$?
2. What happens to the number each time you take away $1$?
3. How are adding $1$ and taking away $1$ related?
Show Answers
  • 1: Each time you add $1$, the total increases by $1$. The numbers go up in order: $3, 4, 5, 6, \dots, 10$.
  • 2: Each time you take away $1$, the total decreases by $1$. The numbers go down in order: $10, 9, 8, 7, \dots, 0$.
  • 3: Adding $1$ and taking away $1$ are opposite operations. One increases the number by $1$, and the other decreases it by $1$.
 

📘 What we've learned

  • We learned how to compare sets of objects to decide which has more, fewer, or the same number.
  • We used matching and counting strategies to compare quantities accurately.
  • We understood that $\text{fewer}$ means the same as $\text{less}$, and $\text{more}$ means the same as $\text{greater}$.
  • We practiced completing comparison sentences using correct number relationships such as $7 < 9$ and $8 > 4$.
  • We explored how adding $1$ increases a number by one step and subtracting $1$ decreases it by one step.

Related Past Papers

Related Tutorials

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