Not all roles available for this page.
Sign in to view assessments and invite other educators
Sign in using your existing Kendall Hunt account. If you don’t have one, create an educator account.
Without calculating, order the expressions according to their values from least to greatest.
Be prepared to explain your reasoning.
Here are four situations that involve and .
Here are two sets of problems.
A1. Lin’s bottle holds cups of water. She drank 1 cup of water. What fraction of the water in the bottle did she drink?
A2. Lin’s bottle holds cups of water. After she drank some, there were cups of water in the bottle. How many cups did she drink?
B1. Plant A is feet tall. This is as tall as Plant B. How tall is Plant B?
B2. Plant A is feet tall. Plant C is as tall as Plant A. How tall is Plant C?
C1. kilogram of berries is put into a container that already has kilograms of berries. How many kilograms are in the container?
C2. A container with kilogram of berries is full. How many kilograms can the container hold?
D1. The area of a rectangle is sq cm and one side is cm. How long is the other side?
D2. The side lengths of a rectangle are cm and cm. What is the area of the rectangle?
E1. A stack of magazines is inches high. The stack needs to fit into a box that is inches high. How many inches too high is the stack?
E2. A stack of magazines is inches high. Each magazine is -inch thick. How many magazines are in the stack?
Take turns with your partner to write equations to represent the situations.
Your teacher will assign 2 or 3 questions for you to answer. For each question:
Mai, Kiran, and Clare are making dough ornaments together. To make one batch of the dough, they need cup of flour and cup of salt. They each brought the ingredients they had at home.
Mai brought 2 cups of flour and cup of salt.
Kiran brought 1 cup of flour and cup of salt.
Clare brought cups of flour and cup of salt.
If the students have plenty of the other ingredients in the recipe, how many whole batches of ornaments can they make? Explain your reasoning.
We can add, subtract, multiply, and divide both whole numbers and fractions. Here is a summary of how we add, subtract, multiply, and divide fractions.