Catégories : Tous - unit - decimals - percentages - fractions

par Bailey Huylar Il y a 11 années

2523

Fractions, Decimals, and Percentages

The text covers foundational mathematical concepts related to fractions, decimals, and percentages. It explains how to express and convert improper fractions into mixed numbers, emphasizing the importance of partitioning and unit iteration.

Fractions, Decimals, and Percentages

Fractions, Decimals, and Percentages

Week Four

Ratios
Most Common Way
Can be written different ways. For example, if there are 2 boys and 34 girls in a class the ratio of girls to the total can be written as... 34:36 OR 34/36 OR 34 to 36
Percent Of... *If you know the easier percentages (50%, 25%, 10%) you can use them to find any percentage! For example, if you know what 10% and 50% are, you can easily find 60%. However, it would be difficult to find 60% easily without finding some of the easier percentages! 10%= move the decimal one place (10% of 72 is 7.2)
You can also use a ratio table to figure out percentages Example on the left!!

Story Problems using Ratio Tables

Molly bought 6 heads of cabbage for $9.30. Willie goes to the same store and needs to buy 22 heads of cabbage. How much will it cost? 6 12 2 24 22 ___________________________________ $9.30 $18.60 $3.10 $37.20 $34.10 It will cost $34.10

20 is what % of 80? 0 25% 50% 100% __________________________ 20 40 80 The answer is 25%. 50% of 100 is 40 and 50% of 40 (25% of 100) is 20.

If 40% is 120, what is 100%? 0 20% 40% 80% 100% ______________________________ 60 120 240 300 The answer is 300 (40%+40%+20%=100%) SO (120+120+60=300)

What is 60% of 30? 0% 10% 50% 60% 100% ________________________________ 0 3 15 18 30 The answer is 18 (15+3=18)

Exponential
Ex: 12.47 (1x10^1)+(2x10^0)+(4x10^-1)+(7x10^-2)
Expanded Form
Ex: 12.47 10+2+4/10+7/100

Week Three

Switching from Fractions to Decimals to Percents
Division of Fractions
Find Common Denominators and Divide Across the Top

2/7 divided by 3/6 12/42 divided by 21/42 12/21

Repeated Subtraction Ex: 6/3 How many 3's go into 6

There is 7/8 of a cake left. You want to give each friend 1/8 of the cake. How many friends can you share the cake with? 7/8 divided by 1/8 = 7 It is easier to think of it as a word problem rather than just 7/8 divided by 1/8.

Partitioning Ex: 6/3 6 split into 3 groups
Invert and Multiply
Review of the Properties
Distributive: 5 3/8 x 2 The answer is not 10 3/8 because you have to distribute the two to both the 5 and the 3/8. The answer should actually be 10 6/8
Commutative: 3/6 x 4/4 = 3/4 x 4/6
Adding and Subtracting Fractions: Additional Practice/Review
Area Model (Ex: 5 3/8 + 2) Just like if we were dealing with whole numbers you would break up the 5 3/8 into 5 and 3/8 and then multiply each by 2 *You should be able to find a picture of this method from the last section!
Clock Method
Number Line

Week Two

Addition and Subtraction Methods to Solve Fractions: we learned that the traditional, partial differences, decomposing, compensating, holy shift, and adding up methods can help us solve addition and subtraction problems with fractions!
The Clock Model: In class we added and subtracted problems in our head and found that it was much easier to picture a clock
Fraction Sense
Part-Part Whole: knowing a fraction can be broken into multiple pieces Ex: 3/4 (read the problem going down) Decomposing: How can 3/4 be decomposed? 1/2 + 1/4; 1/4 + 1/4 + 1/4; 1/8 + 1/8 + 1/4 + 1/4

= 3/4

1/4

1/2 +

Benchmarks: 0, 1/2, 1, knowing whether the number is above or below 1/2, knowing how far away the number is from 1 *Will make comparing fractions much easier!!
One/Two (units) More and Less: If I have 1/4 what is 1/4 more and 1/4 less? You can also ask other numbers such as what is 2/4 more/less or 3/4 more/less. Ex: 1/4

1/4 + 1/4 = 2/4 (1/2 of the circle shaded in)

1/4 - 1/4 = 0 (or nothing shaded in)

Spatial Relationships: Having a picture of the number including where it lies on a number line Ex: 1/4

Week One

Numeration and Denominator
Subtopic
Denominator: the denomination (size) of the pieces
Numerator: the number of pieces you have
How to Talk About Fractions
Change 32/15 so it is no longer an improper fraction. 15/15 + 15/15 + 2/15 = 32/15 1 + 1 + 2/15 = 2 2/15
How do you say 7/3? You have seven 1/3 pieces
How do you say 3/4? You have three 1/4 pieces
Partitioning and Unit Iteration
Unit Iteration: consistently repeating a unit to build a whole

If the original shape had only shown the red portion as 2/3 and you needed to find the whole you would have repeated one of the red portions to make 1

Partition: splitting the whole into equal parts
What is a "unit"?
A whole does not have to be one!

Example: You bought 24 cans of soda but did not drink 2/3 of them. How much did you have left over? Remember: There are different answers based on what you label the unit!

Unit= 1 row of 12 Answer: 1 1/2 rows left over

Picture the image of 24 cans but arranged in 2 rows of 12!

Unit= 1 six pack Answer: 3 six packs left over

Seen as four individual units of 6 cans each

Unit= 1 can Answer: 18 cans were left over

Seen as 24 individual cans