Table of contents | |
Making a whole | |
Using number lines to represent wholes | |
Using hundred squares to represent a whole | |
Partitioning numbers | |
Part - whole models |
Let's explore how number lines can help us visualize wholes:
We can represent one whole unit on a number line.
We can divide this line to show fractions of the whole where each part represents a fraction, adding up to one whole.
For example, on a number line, 5/8 + 3/8 equals 8/8, which is one whole.
Let's delve deeper into fractions using another number line:
When we add 5/10, 2/10, and 3/10 on the number line, they sum up to 10/10, which equals one whole.
In the provided hundred square, imagine shading in eighty-seven out of one hundred squares and then adding thirteen more to make the whole square.
On the number line, the colored bar representing 0.87 and the bar representing 0.13 visually show how they combine to make 1.
0.87 + 0.13 = 1
Another way to represent partitioning a number into different parts is by using a part-whole model, like this:
Part-whole models are useful for showing how a whole can be divided into different parts and that the sum of these parts will equal the whole.
Look at this example to see another way to display information about the parts that make up a whole.
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