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The purpose of this Warm-up is for students to recognize that two values of reference are needed to determine the number that a point on the number line represents. The numbers 0 and 1 are commonly used when the numbers of interest are small. With only one number shown (for example, only a 0 or a 1), we can’t tell what number a point represents, though we can tell if the number is greater or less than the given number. These understandings will be helpful later in the lesson, as students determine the size of fractions relative to and 1.
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
The purpose of this activity is for students to identify fractions using known benchmarks on the number line and to compare them to 1. Given a point on a number line, the location of 0, and one other benchmark value, students decide if the point represents a number greater or less than 1. They also quantify the distance of that number from 1. Students do so by relying on what they know about the number of fractional parts in 1 whole, as well as by looking for and making use of structure (MP7).
The work here develops students’ ability and flexibility in using number lines to reason about fractions. In later lessons, students will work with number lines that are increasingly more abstract to help them reason about fractions in more sophisticated ways.
For each number line:
a. Name a fraction that the point represents.
b. Is that fraction greater than or less than 1?
c. How far is it from 1?
Optional
Card Sort Where Do They Belong? Cards
In this optional activity, students sort a set of fractions into groups based on whether they are less than, equal to, or greater than . This sorting task enables students to estimate or to reason informally about the size of fractions relative to this benchmark before they go on to do so more precisely. In the next activity, students reason about fractions represented by unlabeled points on the number line and their distance from .
As students discuss and justify their decisions, they share a mathematical claim and the thinking behind it (MP3).
This activity is optional because it asks students to reason about fractions without the support of the number line.
Previously, students located fractions on number lines and considered their distance and relative position to 1. Here, they think about fractions in relation to . The purpose of this activity is to prompt students to use another benchmark value to determine the relative size of a fraction.
While students may be able to visually tell if a point on the number line represents a number that is greater or less than , finding its distance to is less straightforward than finding its distance to 1. The former requires thinking about in terms of equivalent fractions.
In three cases, the fraction and the point of interest are each on a tick mark on the number line. This makes it possible for students to quantify the distance without further partitioning the number line. In the last diagram, is not on a tick mark, prompting students to subdivide the given intervals, relying on their understanding of equivalence and relationships between fractions.
The work here encourages students to look for and make use of structure (MP7) and will be helpful later in the unit when students compare fractions by reasoning about their distance from benchmark values.
“Today we identified fractions on a number line and compared them to and 1.”
Display the number line from the Warm-up (or ask students to refer to the diagram there).
Label one of the tick marks (other than the one with the point) with “”.
“Suppose a classmate is absent today, and you are asked to explain how to figure out the fraction that the point represents and how far away it is from . What would you say?“ (I’d see how far away is from 0 and then double that distance to know where 1 is, which would tell me the size of each space between tick marks. If is 4 spaces away from 0, then 1 must be 8 spaces away, and each space must represent . I’d count the spaces from 0 to know the fraction. I’d count the spaces between the point and to know its distance from .)
We used fraction strips to represent fractions with denominators of 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, and 12.
Fraction strips helped us reason about relationships between fractions.
Example:
Fraction strips also helped us reason about the sizes of fractions.
Same denominator: The size of the parts is the same. So, the fraction with more parts is greater.
Example: is greater than .
Same numerator: The number of parts is the same. So, the fraction with larger parts is greater.
Example: is greater than .
We used what we learned about fraction strips to partition number lines and represent fractions.
Your teacher will give you a set of cards that show fractions.
Sort the cards into 3 groups: less than , equal to , and greater than . Be ready to explain your reasoning.
Discuss your sorting with another group. Then record the fractions in the table.
| less than | equal to | greater than |
|---|---|---|
Discuss your sorting with the class. Then complete the sentences.
For each number line:
a. Name a fraction that the point represents.
b. Is that fraction greater than or less than ?
c. What fraction describes how far the point is from ?