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The purpose of this Warm-up is to get students thinking about decimal expansions of fractions. This will be useful when students use long division to find decimal expansions in a later activity. While students may notice and wonder many things about these equations, the important discussion points are the number of decimal places given for each fraction and any patterns students notice within the decimal expansions.
This prompt gives students opportunities to see and make use of structure (MP7). The specific structure they might notice is repeating and terminating decimals.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Display the equations for all to see. Ask students to think of at least one thing they notice and at least one thing they wonder. Give students 1 minute of quiet think time and then 1 minute to discuss the things they notice and wonder with their partner.
A calculator gives the following decimal representations for some unit fractions:
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
Ask students to share the things they noticed and wondered. Record and display their responses without editing or commentary. If possible, record the relevant reasoning on or near the equations. Next, ask students, “Is there anything on this list that you are wondering about now?” Encourage students to observe what is on display and respectfully ask for clarification, point out contradicting information, or voice any disagreement.
In this activity, students use long division to find the decimal expansion for three different fractions. They see that two of the three fractions result in repeating decimals. As students describe and compare the quotients and , they attend to precision of language (MP6).
Explain to students that we can use long division to calculate the decimal representation of a fraction. For example, is equal to .
Using long division, we see that is equal to 0.875. This process works for any fraction.
Here is another example: is equal to .
In this case, the division will never result in a remainder of 0. Because we keep getting 3 over and over again, this is called a repeating decimal and can be written as .
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give students 3–5 minutes of quiet work time on the first problem and 1–2 minutes to compare their responses and discuss the second question with their partner. Then give students 2–3 minutes of partner work time on the remaining question. Follow with whole-class discussion.
The purpose of this discussion is to help students make sense of the value of repeating decimals. Direct students’ attention to the reference created using Collect and Display. Ask students to share how they determined which fraction has the greatest value. Invite students to borrow language from the display as needed. As they respond, update the reference to include additional phrases, such as “repeating decimal,” “terminating decimal,” “place value,” “hundredths place,” “thousandths place,” “bar over ___.”
The key takeaway is that 0.36, , and are different values, even though their decimal representations look quite similar.
In this activity students match tape diagrams, verbal descriptions, and equations. The descriptions express the increase or decrease as a fraction of the original amount, while the equations express the scale factor as a decimal. This gives students more practice converting fractions to decimals, including repeating decimals. Then students create their own diagram to represent one of the equations that didn’t have a match.
In this activity, students critique a statement or response that is intentionally unclear, incorrect, or incomplete and improve it by clarifying meaning, correcting errors, and adding details (MP3).
Give students 4–5 minutes of quiet work time followed by time for partner discussion. Then hold a whole-class discussion.
Match each diagram with a description and an equation.
Descriptions:
an increase by
an increase by
an increase by
a decrease by
a decrease by
Equations:
The purpose of this discussion is to emphasize the connection between the numbers in the description and the numbers in the equation. First, ask students to share which description and equation they matched with each diagram. Encourage students to agree or disagree and to restate other students’ reasoning in their own words.
Use Critique, Correct, Clarify to give students an opportunity to improve a sample written response to Diagram A by correcting errors, clarifying meaning, and adding details.
“Diagram A shows an increase by , so I matched it with .”
Ask, “What parts of this response are unclear, incorrect, or incomplete?” As students respond, annotate the display with 2–3 ideas to indicate the parts of the writing that could use improvement.
“In Diagram A, if is the original, then is an increase by , but the equation wasn’t on the list. If we view as the original, then is a decrease by , which matches with .
If time permits, invite students to share the diagram they created. Ask other students to identify the equation that represents the same relationship.
Optional
Decimal Relationships Cards
In this partner activity, students take turns matching situations and equations. The situations are the same as students saw in a previous activity, but this time the equations use decimals instead of fractions. No tape diagrams are given; however, students may choose to draw diagrams if they find this helpful for matching the descriptions with the equations.
As students analyze different representations, they practice reasoning quantitatively and abstractly (MP2). In making connections across representations, they practice looking for and making use of structure (MP7).
Tell students that the cards contain either situations or equations and that they will take turns matching the cards. Explain how to set up and do the activity. If time allows, demonstrate the steps with a student as a partner. Consider demonstrating productive ways to agree or disagree, for example, by explaining mathematical thinking or asking clarifying questions.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give each group a set of slips cut from the blackline master.
The purpose of this discussion is to make connections between the numbers in the description and the numbers in the equation. Select 2–3 groups to share one of their sets of cards and how they matched the description with an equation. Discuss as many different sets of cards as the time allows.
Consider asking:
Share with students, “Today we used long division to convert fractions to decimals. We continued using the distributive property to write expressions that represented situations.”
To review the process for converting a fraction to a decimal, consider asking students:
To review the role of the distributive property in making calculations more efficient, consider prompting students:
Long division gives us a way of finding decimal representations for fractions. It finds the quotient one digit at a time, from left to right. For example:
To find a decimal representation for , we can divide 9 by 8.
So .
To find a decimal representation for , we can divide 8 by 9.
So . This is a repeating decimal because the digits keep going in this same pattern over and over.
Sometimes it is easier to work with the decimal representation of a number, and sometimes it is easier to work with its fraction representation. It is important to be able to work with both. For example, consider the following pair of problems:
Since , these are both exactly the same problem, and the answer is or . When we work with percentages in later lessons, the decimal representation will come in especially handy.
Use long division to express each fraction as a decimal.
Some students may set up their long division with the divisor and dividend in the wrong places. They will get , , and 2.75 as their answers. Prompt them to think about what is being divided and what it is being divided by.