Compare Fractions
Grade 5 Math – Notes & Formulae
Graph & Compare Fractions on Number Lines
- Draw (or imagine) a number line from 0 to 1 (or beyond for larger fractions).
- Divide into equal parts: Denominator = number of parts.
- Count from 0 for numerator’s position.
- Fractions further to the right are greater.
- Example: Compare \(\frac{3}{4}\) and \(\frac{2}{3}\); place both on the same line. The one closer to 1 is larger.
Compare Fractions Using Benchmarks
- Benchmarks are familiar reference values like 0, \(\frac{1}{2}\), and 1.
- Compare each fraction to \(\frac{1}{2}\) or 1 to see which is closer or bigger/smaller.
- Example: \(\frac{5}{8} > \frac{1}{2}\) since \(5>4\) for denominator 8.
\(\frac{3}{8} < \frac{1}{2}\).
Tip: Use benchmarks for quick mental comparisons!
Compare Fractions & Mixed Numbers
- If denominators are the same, compare numerators.
- If denominators differ, find common denominator (usually LCD) or cross-multiply.
- Cross-multiply: For \(\frac{a}{b}\) vs. \(\frac{c}{d}\), compare \(ad\) and \(bc\):
If \(a \times d > c \times b\), then \(\frac{a}{b} > \frac{c}{d}\) - Convert mixed numbers to improper if needed.
- Example: Compare \(\frac{3}{5}\) and \(\frac{2}{3}\): \(3\times3=9\), \(5\times2=10\), so \(9 < 10\) → \(\frac{3}{5} < \frac{2}{3}\)
- For mixed numbers, compare whole parts first.
Shortcut: If equal denominators, bigger numerator wins; if equal numerators, smaller denominator wins.
Put Fractions in Order
- Find common denominators (LCD), rewrite each fraction, then compare numerators.
- Alternatively, convert each to decimal (divide numerator by denominator) for fast ordering.
- Order from least to greatest or vice versa as needed.
- Example: \(\frac{1}{4}, \frac{3}{8}, \frac{2}{5}\) → LCD is 40:
\(\frac{10}{40}, \frac{15}{40}, \frac{16}{40}\) → Order: \(\frac{1}{4} < \frac{3}{8} < \frac{2}{5}\)
Tip: List as decimals for quick double-check: \(0.25, 0.375, 0.4\)
Quick Reference
- On a number line, further right = bigger fraction.
- Use benchmarks like 0, \(\frac{1}{2}\), 1.
- Cross-multiply to compare when denominators are different.
- Use LCD to make denominators match for comparing and ordering.
- With mixed numbers, compare whole part first, then fraction.
- Decimals are a handy comparison tool for tricky fractions!
Tip: Always write two equivalent fractions with the same denominator before comparing!