In this lesson plan, students are given various activities that will require them to compare and order fractions.
- Subject:
- Mathematics
- Material Type:
- Lesson Plan
- Provider:
- Lakeshore Learning
- Author:
- Lakeshore
- Date Added:
- 02/26/2019
In this lesson plan, students are given various activities that will require them to compare and order fractions.
This lesson is Day 10 in a series of 12 lessons around fraction equivalences and comparisons.
This video lesson serves as a review of equpartitioning in order to determine the fractional part of an area or length. This is a necessary foundational skill for comparing and finding equivalent fractions.
This lesson is Day 12 in a series of 12 lessons around fraction equivalences and comparisons.
Use your math skills to help detectives solve the crime. This video lesson reviews fractions of an area, fractions on a number line, and equivalent fractions. No materials are required.
This lesson is Day 1 in a series of 12 lessons around fraction equivalences and comparisons.
This video lesson encourages students to reason about and visualize fractions. The lesson focuses on the ideas that fractions are fair shares and that fractions can be compared. This lesson assumes that students have some initial experiences with fractions.
This lesson is Day 6 in a series of 12 lessons around fraction equivalences and comparisons.
This video lesson teaches students how to create bar models to compare lengths/distances. Students will need a piece of paper, ruler, scissors, and a pencil. These bar models will also be used for Day 7's lesson.
This video lesson introduces the idea that when comparing two fractions, they must refer to the same size whole. Then, students use fraction strips to compare fractions. Students may use virtual fraction strips from Toy Theater (https://toytheater.com/fraction-strips/)
This lesson is Day 8 in a series of 12 lessons around fraction equivalences and comparisons.
This video lesson introduces the number as a tool for representing and comparing fractions. Students will need a black piece of a paper and a pencil with a good eraser.