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Equivalent Fractions

Understanding Equivalent Fractions

Have you ever noticed that half a pizza is the same amount of food whether it's cut into 11 giant slice or 22 smaller slices? This is the idea behind equivalent fractions!

Equivalent fractions are fractions that look different but show the exact same amount. "Equivalent" simply means "equal in value."

Visualizing Equivalent Fractions

Imagine you have two identical chocolate bars.

  • You break the first bar into 22 equal pieces and eat 11 piece. You ate 12\frac{1}{2} of the bar.
  • You break the second bar into 44 equal pieces and eat 22 pieces. You ate 24\frac{2}{4} of the bar.

Even though the numbers are different, you ate the exact same amount of chocolate! Therefore, we can write: 12=24\frac{1}{2} = \frac{2}{4}

The Golden Rule for Equivalent Fractions

To find an equivalent fraction, there is one golden rule to remember: Whatever you do to the top number (numerator), you must do the exact same thing to the bottom number (denominator).

You can find equivalent fractions by either multiplying or dividing.

Using Multiplication

Let's find a fraction equivalent to 13\frac{1}{3}. We can choose any number to multiply by, let's pick 22:

1×23×2=26\frac{1 \times 2}{3 \times 2} = \frac{2}{6}

So, 13\frac{1}{3} and 26\frac{2}{6} are equivalent fractions.

Using Division

If you have a fraction with larger numbers, like 24\frac{2}{4}, you can divide the top and bottom by the same number. Let's divide both by 22:

2÷24÷2=12\frac{2 \div 2}{4 \div 2} = \frac{1}{2}

Finding the Missing Number

Sometimes you will be asked to fill in a blank, like this: 23=__6\frac{2}{3} = \frac{\_\_}{6}

To solve this, look at the denominators (the bottom numbers). Ask yourself: "How did the 33 turn into a 66?" Since 3×2=63 \times 2 = 6, we know the bottom was multiplied by 22.

Because of our golden rule, we must multiply the top by 22 as well: 2×2=42 \times 2 = 4

So, the missing number is 44, making the equivalent fraction 46\frac{4}{6}.