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What do you notice? What do you wonder?
This activity prompts students to use number lines to illustrate the decomposition of a fraction into sums of other fractions, reinforcing their work from an earlier lesson. Along the way, students recognize that one way to decompose a fraction greater than 1 is to write it as a sum of a whole number and a fraction less than 1. This insight prepares students to interpret and write mixed numbers in later activities.
In this activity, students use number lines to represent addition of two fractions and to find the value of the sum. The addends include fractions greater than 1, which can be expressed as a sum of a whole number and a fraction. Students practice constructing a logical argument and critiquing the reasoning of others when they explain which of the strategies they agree with and why (MP3).
Use a number line to represent each addition expression and find its value.
Optional
Jump Forward Cards
This optional activity gives students an additional opportunity to practice using number lines to decompose fractions into sums of other fractions and to record the decompositions as equations.
The fractions on the cards (shown here) contain no whole numbers or mixed numbers, but some students may use them to find the second addend (and to avoid counting tick marks on the number line). Some also may choose to label each number line with whole numbers beyond 1 to facilitate their reasoning and equation writing.
Here are four number lines. There is a point on each number line.
For each number line, label the point with the fraction it represents. This is your target. Make 2 forward jumps to get from 0 to the target.
“Today, we used number lines to decompose fractions into sums of smaller fractions, or sums of a whole number and a fraction. We also learned that a fraction greater than 1 can be written as a mixed number.”
“How would you explain to a classmate who is absent today what a mixed number is?” (It's a number written as a whole number and a fraction.)
“Let’s look at some sums you found in the second activity. Which sums can be written as mixed numbers and why?” ( and , because they are greater than 1.)
“What is a mixed number equivalent to each of those fractions? How do you know?” ( and . is equivalent to because and is 1. is equivalent to because is 2 wholes and adding more gives .)