Comparing and Ordering Fractions
Comparing and Ordering Fractions
When working with fractions, you often need to figure out which one is larger or put a whole group of them in order. There are two great strategies for doing this: using benchmark fractions and finding a common denominator.
Using Benchmark Fractions
A benchmark fraction is a common, familiar fraction like 21 that you can use to quickly estimate and compare other fractions.
Example: Is 74 greater or less than 21?
- Think about what exactly half of the denominator 7 is. Half of 7 is 3.5.
- Because the numerator 4 is larger than 3.5, the fraction 74 represents more than a half.
- Answer: 74>21
Finding a Common Denominator
When fractions are close in size or hard to estimate, the most accurate method is to give them a common denominator. This means rewriting the fractions so their bottom numbers are exactly the same.
Example: Compare 83 and 125.
- Find a common multiple for the denominators 8 and 12. The number 24 works perfectly because both 8 and 12 divide into it evenly.
- Convert both fractions to have 24 as the denominator: 83=8×33×3=249 125=12×25×2=2410
- Now that the pieces are the same size, just compare the numerators. Since 9<10, we know 249<2410.
- Answer: 83<125
Ordering Fractions
You can use the common denominator method to order a list of fractions from least to greatest (or greatest to least).
Example: Order 32, 85, and 43 from least to greatest.
- Find a common denominator for 3, 8, and 4. The number 24 is a multiple of all three.
- Convert each fraction: 32=2416 85=2415 43=2418
- Look at the new numerators: 15, 16, and 18. Order them from smallest to largest: 15<16<18.
- Answer: The correct order from least to greatest is 85, 32, 43.