Title: Fractions, Decimals,
1Fractions, Decimals, Percents
2Fractions
- Denominator- the number on the bottom of a
fraction - Represents how many equal pieces something is
being cut into - Numerator- the number on the top
- Represents the number of equal pieces
3Example two fifths 2/5
4Equivalent Fractions
- Equivalent Fractions are fractions that are equal
to each other. - For instance 1/2 2/4
- To find equivalent fractions, just multiply the
numerator and denominator by the same number. - Example 1 x 2 2
- 2 x 2 4
5Simplifying Fractions
- Simplifying Fractions means to change the
fractions into their simplest form - Example 5/10 1/2
- You can make this change easily by looking at the
factors of both the numerator and denominator. - Factors of 5 1, 5
- Factors of 10 1, 2, 5, 10
6Simplifying Fractions cont
- Factors of 5 1, 5
- Factors of 10 1, 2, 5, 10
- The common factors between both numbers are one
and five. Five is the Greatest. So it is the
Greatest Common Factor. Most mathematicians call
this the GCF. - Find out how many times the GCF goes into both
the numerator and denominator. - 5 goes into 5, 1 time
- 5 goes into 10, 2 times
- therefore. 5/10 1/2
7Adding Subtracting Fractions
- When adding and subtracting fractions, you must
first have the same denominators for both
fractions. - Example 1/4 2/4
- Keep the denominator the same- add or subtract
the numerators. - 1/4 2/4 ¾
- (again, the denominator stays the same, the
numerators get added together.)
8Common Denominators
- Before you can add fractions, you must make the
denominators the same. This is called having
common denominators. - You can make common denominators by looking at
the multiples of both denominators. The smallest
common multiple (least common multiple-LCM)
becomes your new denominator.
9Example
Look at the denominators and find the LCM (least
common multiple)
Multiples of 5 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30
Multiples of 3 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 24, 27,
30
- 15 is the smallest multiple that both numbers
have in common therefore, that is the number
that should be used. Although, 30 and any other
common multiples will also work.
10Example continued
10/15
3/15
The answer is 13/15.
11.. Answer
- 1/5 2/3
- 1/5 3/15
- 2/3 10/15
- 3/15 10/15
- 13/15
-
12Multiplying Fractions
- When multiplying fractions or should I say when
finding the product of fractions - You simply multiply across.
- Step 1- Multiply the Numerators
- Step 2- Multiply the Denominators
- Step 3- Simplify
- Please note that in most cases, you must
simplify the fraction after multiplying.
13Example continued
- 2/5 x 3/8
-
- (2 x 3) / (5 x 8) 6/40
- 6/40 3/20
- 2/5 x 3/8 3/20
14Decimals
Tenths Hundredths Thousandths Ten-thousandths Hundred- thousandths Millionths
- Think about place value and think about money
- .55 means
- Fifty-five hundredths
- Or
- Five tenths plus five hundredths
150.75 ¾ 75/100 75
16Percents
- Percent form tells how many per every hundred.
- 50 50/100
- Also equal to ½ or
- 100/200 or 200/400
17Benchmark Fractions
- These are the fractions that are the most
commonly used. Memorize these benchmark
fractions and their percent and decimal
equivalents to make working with fractions
easier.
½ 50 0.50
1/3 33 0.333
¼ 25 0.25
1/5 20 0.20
1/6 16.7 0.167
1/8 12.5 0.125
1/10 10 0.10
2/3 67 0.667
¾ 75 0.75