Equivalent Fractions
Subtracting Fractions with Unlike Denominators
Subtracting Mixed Numbers
Adding Fractions with Unlike Denominators
Adding Mixed Numbers
100

What fraction is equivalent to 3/4 with a denominator of 8?

6/8

100

What is 3/4 - 1/4?

1/2

100

What is 4 (3/4) - 2 (1/4)?

2 (1/2)

100

What is 1/3 + 1/3?

2/3

100

What is a mixed number?

A whole number and a fraction.

200

True or False: 4/6 and 6/8 are equivalent.

False.

200

What is 2/3 - 2/5?

4/15

200

What is 3 (1/2) - 1 (3/4)?

1 (3/4)

200

What is 1/2 + 1/4?

3/4

200

What is 2 (1/2) + 1 (1/2)?

4

300

What number could you multiply 5/6 by to get a denominator of 18? What will the numerator be when you do so?

3 and 15
300

What is 5/6 - 1/4?

7/12

300
What is 5 (2/3) - 2 (1/6)?

3 (1/2)

300

What is 3/5 + 1/2? Hint: Answer may be a mixed number or an improper fraction.

11/10 or 1 (1/10)

300

What is 2 (2/3) + 3 (5/6)?

6 (1/2)

400

Explain how you know 7/9 and 14/18 are equivalent.

In the fraction 7/9, both the numerator and denominator are multiplied by 2 to get 14/18.

400

You drank 2/4 of a bottle of water. Later, you drank another 2/8. How much more water did you drink the first time than the second time?

1/4

400

A rope is 6 (1/2) feet long. 2 (3/4) of the rope is cut off. How much rope remains?

3 (3/4)

400

A recipe uses 2/3 cups of flour and 3/4 cups of sugar. How many cups are used in total?

1 (17/24) or 41/24

400

A runner jogs 1 (3/4) miles in the morning and 2 (2/3) miles at night. How far did the running jog in total?

4 (5/12) miles

500

Why must the numerator and denominator be multiplied by the same number when creating equivalent fractions?

Multiplying by the same number keeps the fraction representing the same part of the whole, keeping the ratio/proportion equivalent.

500

A student solves 5/8 - 1/4 = 4/4. Is the student correct? Why or why not?

No, the student subtracted denominators instead of finding a common denominator.

500

Use two different strategies to answer the following problem and explain why they give the same result: 4 (1/4) - 2 (5/6)

Answers will vary. Students may use number lines, picture models, regrouping, improper fractions, etc.

500

A student says 2/5 + 1/10 = 3/15. Is the student correct? Why?

No, the student added denominators instead of finding a common denominator to add.

500

What is 4 (5/6) + 3 (7/12)? Explain how you know you are correct.

8 (5/12)