1.
Provide each student with or ask each student to bring a piece of rectangular
paper. Fold the paper in half. After you have folded the paper in half,
instruct the students to do the same. Explain that a fraction is a part
of a whole. You have divided a whole piece of paper into two equal parts.
Instruct the students to color one of the two equal parts. Ask a student
to write on the board to show that one out of the two equal parts is now
shaded. Introduce the vocabulary words numerator and denominator. The
numerator is the number of parts shaded and the denominator is the total
number of equal parts. (For those students who have difficulty remembering
which is the numerator and which is the denominator, try this memory association
technique----In a fraction, one number is UP above the line and one is
DOWN below the line. Numerator has a "u" in it and so does up; denominator
begins with "d" and so does down.)
2.
Repeat the same activity with pieces of paper, demonstrating , , , , .
Each time, a student should write the fraction on the board and identify
the numerator and the denominator. If you prefer, project a rectangle
on the overhead projector and divide the rectangle into the same fractions
as those in the paper-folding demonstration.
3.
Equivalent Fractions Ask students to fold a rectangular sheet of paper
in half and color one of the two equal parts. Ask what fraction of the
paper is colored ( ). Now have them refold the same paper and then fold
it in half once again. Unfold. How many equal parts now? (4) What fraction
is shaded ( or ) Since the amount of shading has not changed, this means
that = . Tell students that and are two names for the same amount. Therefore,
they are equivalent. Now have students refold the papers and then fold
in half a third time. Unfold. What new fraction have they found that is
equivalent to and ? ( ). These three fractions name the same amount.
TYING
IT ALL TOGETHER: Once students have a firm understanding of
equivalent fractions, they will be ready to find "another name" for a
fraction by multiplying or dividing the numerator and denominator by the
same (nonzero) number. This emphasis on equivalent fractions will pay
dividends when you begin teaching addition and subtraction of fractions
with unlike denominators.
SUGGESTIONS/MODIFICATIONS
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