Comparing and Ordering Fractions
Comparing and Ordering Fractions
Comparing and Ordering Fractions
Students should be comfortable using models to compare and order fractions before you ask them to use benchmarks and equivalent
fractions to perform the same task.
Materials: none
Preparation: none
• Take notes on the board or overhead projector as students devise rules for benchmarks for 0, , and 1. Some students may be
able to devise the rules without a number line; others may need to see how the fractions fall visually.
• Ask: Is close to 1?
By their definition, is close to 1.
• Ask: Is close to 1?
Even though 1 is close to 2, you can't really say that is close to 1.
• Ask: Is close to ?
By their definition, is close to .
• Ask: How do you think you can tell when a fraction is close to 0?
Given the discussions so far, this one should easily lead to the conclusion that a fraction is close to zero when the numerator is
very small compared to the denominator. This gets more obvious as the denominator gets larger (1 in the numerator makes a
fraction seem close to 0 unless the denominator is 2).
• Say: Use the benchmarks you just made up to compare these numbers to 0, , or 1: , , and .
is close to 1; is close to 0; is close to but less than .
• Ask: Can you use benchmarks to order , , and from least to greatest?
Given the previous exercise, students should easily order these numbers: , , .
• Ask: What can you do if you're not sure about how two fractions compare?
Help students to arrive at the conclusion that they can write equivalent fractions with like denominators if they're not sure of a
comparison.
• Ask: How can we find an equivalent fraction for with a denominator of 10?
Guide students to see that to find an equivalent fraction, you need to multiply both the numerator and denominator by the
same number.
If you said 5/16 was larger, it was because you thought since 16 is larger than 3, then 5/16 must be larger than 1/3 (especially since 5 is bigger
than 1!). But it turned out that 1/3 was larger.
If you drew two circles, divided one into 16 parts and colored 5 of those, and divided the other circle into 3 parts and shaded 1 of them, you
could easily see (assuming you made each part of equal size) that 1/3 was bigger than 5/16, but since we are working with a keyboard and not
a sketch pad, this is harder to show than just working it out, and it can be worked out only by finding the lowest common denominator to 'easily
see' which is bigger.
Since 16 and 3 are relatively prime to each other, you can use the LCD of 16 x 3 = 48.
5x3/16x3 = 15/48 and 1x16/3x16 = 16/48. Since the numerator of the second fraction is bigger, then 1/3 is bigger than 5/16. NO
GUESSWORK INVOLVED!
So, to find which of two or more fractions is larger (or smaller for that matter), turn the fractions into fractions with a common denominator, then
judge by their numerators which is bigger (or smaller).
You do basically the same thing--find the lowest common denominator of the set of fractions--to put the fractions in order.
Arrange the following in order from least to greatest: 13/20; 3/5; 3/4
13/20, 3/5 which is 12/20, and 3/4 which is 15/20. So from least to greatest, we have:
3/5, then 13/20, then 3/4.
Could you tell just by looking at the three fractions given which was the lowest? Believe me, I couldn't!
Comparing Fractions
Sometimes we need to compare two fractions to discover which is larger or smaller. There are two easy ways to
compare fractions: using decimals; or using the same denominator
If two fractions have the same denominator then they are easy to compare:
Example:
4
/9 is less than 5/9 (because 4 is less than 5)
But if the denominators are not the same you need to make them the same (using Equivalent Fractions).
3 9 5 10
= and =
8 24 12 24
×3 ×2
It is now easy to see that /24 is smaller than /24, (because 9 is smaller than 10).
9 10
Then it is just a matter of changing each fraction to make it's denominator the Least Common Multiple.
5 25 13 26
= and =
6 30 15 30
×5 ×2
Now we can easily see that /30 is the larger fraction
26