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Previously, students generated equivalent fractions in any way that made sense to them. In this lesson, students use number lines to reason about and generate equivalent fractions. In particular, they experiment with partitioning a fractional part on the number line into smaller equal-size parts. Through repeated reasoning, students begin to notice regularity in the numerator and denominator of the equivalent fractions—namely, that the numbers are multiples of those in the original fraction. The experience of sub-partitioning number lines prepares students to formalize their observation and reason numerically about equivalent fractions in upcoming lessons.
In this lesson, students take a closer look at the relationships between fractions with denominator 5, 10, and other multiples of 5. They begin to consider the meaning of fractions with denominator 100.
In past lessons and in grade 3, students used fraction strips, tape diagrams, and number lines to partition unit fractions into smaller fractional parts. For example, they partitioned into fourths, into sixths, and into eighths. How readily did students transfer those insights to work with fractions with greater denominators on the number line? What was intuitive to them and what wasn’t?
Warm-up
Activity 1
Activity 2
Lesson Synthesis
Cool-down