Learn on PengiIllustrative Mathematics, Grade 5Chapter 3: Multiplying and Dividing Fractions

Lesson 12: Represent Multiplication and Division Situations

In this Grade 5 lesson from Illustrative Mathematics Chapter 3, students explore the relationship between multiplication and division with fractions, learning to represent the same real-world situation using both a division equation and a multiplication equation. Using contexts like dividing pounds of beef by a unit fraction and sharing a fraction equally between people, students practice writing equations such as 2 ÷ ¼ and its multiplication counterpart. The lesson builds fluency with 5.NF.B.4 and 5.NF.B.7 by connecting diagram representations to symbolic fraction operations.

Section 1

Solve Word Problems: Fraction of a Fraction

Property

To find a fraction of a fraction, you multiply the two fractions. This is equivalent to dividing the first fraction by the reciprocal of the second fraction. For a unit fraction 1b\frac{1}{b} and a whole number cc, taking 1c\frac{1}{c} of 1b\frac{1}{b} is calculated as:

1c×1b=1c×b\frac{1}{c} \times \frac{1}{b} = \frac{1}{c \times b}

Examples

  • Maria has 12\frac{1}{2} of a chocolate bar left. She eats 13\frac{1}{3} of the leftover chocolate. The fraction of the original chocolate bar she ate is 13×12=16\frac{1}{3} \times \frac{1}{2} = \frac{1}{6}.
  • A recipe calls for 14\frac{1}{4} cup of flour. If you only want to make half of the recipe, you would need 12\frac{1}{2} of the flour. The amount of flour needed is 12×14=18\frac{1}{2} \times \frac{1}{4} = \frac{1}{8} of a cup.

Explanation

This skill applies the concept of fraction division to real-world scenarios. Often, a word problem will ask for a "fraction of a fraction," such as "one-half of the remaining one-third." The word "of" in this context signifies multiplication. Solving these problems is equivalent to dividing the initial fraction by a whole number, connecting the application directly to the visual models of partitioning a fractional piece.

Section 2

Solve Word Problems Involving Fraction Multiplication

Property

To find a fractional part of a quantity, you multiply the fraction by the quantity. This applies to situations involving scaling recipes, calculating distances, or finding a portion of a given amount. The operation is represented as:

part=fraction×whole \text{part} = \text{fraction} \times \text{whole}

Examples

  • A recipe calls for 34\frac{3}{4} cup of sugar. If you are making 12\frac{1}{2} of the recipe, how much sugar do you need?
12×34=38 cup of sugar \frac{1}{2} \times \frac{3}{4} = \frac{3}{8} \text{ cup of sugar}
  • A runner wants to complete 23\frac{2}{3} of a race that is 910\frac{9}{10} of a mile long. What distance did the runner cover?
23×910=1830=35 of a mile \frac{2}{3} \times \frac{9}{10} = \frac{18}{30} = \frac{3}{5} \text{ of a mile}

Explanation

This skill involves translating real-world scenarios into fraction multiplication problems. Key phrases like "fraction of a quantity" or "part of a total" often indicate that multiplication is needed. To solve, you multiply the numerators together and the denominators together to find the resulting fraction. This skill extends the concept of "fraction of a fraction" to a wider variety of practical applications.

Section 3

Solve Word Problems: Division of a Unit Fraction by a Whole Number

Property

A real-world situation involving sharing or splitting a fractional amount (1b\frac{1}{b}) into a number of equal groups (cc) can be solved using division. The equation is:

1b÷c=1b×c\frac{1}{b} \div c = \frac{1}{b \times c}

Examples

  • There is 12\frac{1}{2} of a pizza left. If 3 friends share it equally, what fraction of the whole pizza does each friend get?
12÷3=16\frac{1}{2} \div 3 = \frac{1}{6}
  • A runner completes 14\frac{1}{4} of a race in 5 minutes, running at a constant speed. What fraction of the total race distance does the runner complete each minute?
14÷5=120\frac{1}{4} \div 5 = \frac{1}{20}

Explanation

These problems require you to divide a unit fraction by a whole number. To solve, identify the initial fractional amount and the number of equal groups it is being divided into. Dividing a unit fraction by a whole number results in a smaller unit fraction. This is because you are splitting an existing part into even smaller pieces.

Section 4

Solve Word Problems: Division of a Whole Number by a Unit Fraction

Property

Dividing a whole number cc by a unit fraction 1b\frac{1}{b} is equivalent to multiplying the whole number by the denominator bb. This answers the question: "How many pieces of size 1b\frac{1}{b} fit into cc wholes?"

c÷1b=c×bc \div \frac{1}{b} = c \times b

Examples

  • A baker has 4 pounds of flour. If each cake recipe requires 13\frac{1}{3} of a pound of flour, how many cakes can the baker make?
4÷13=4×3=12 cakes4 \div \frac{1}{3} = 4 \times 3 = 12 \text{ cakes}
  • A relay race is 5 miles long. If each runner runs for 12\frac{1}{2} of a mile, how many runners are needed for the race?
5÷12=5×2=10 runners5 \div \frac{1}{2} = 5 \times 2 = 10 \text{ runners}

Explanation

This skill involves situations where you need to find out how many fractional parts fit into a whole number. For example, if you have 2 pizzas and you want to know how many 14\frac{1}{4}-pizza slices there are, you are solving 2÷142 \div \frac{1}{4}. Since each whole pizza has 4 quarter slices, 2 pizzas would have 2×4=82 \times 4 = 8 slices. Dividing a whole number by a unit fraction is the same as multiplying the whole number by the denominator of the fraction.

Book overview

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Chapter 3: Multiplying and Dividing Fractions

  1. Lesson 1

    Lesson 1: Represent Unit Fraction Multiplication

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: Multiply Unit Fractions

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Multiply Unit and Non-unit Fractions

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: Generalize Fraction Multiplication

  5. Lesson 5

    Lesson 5: Apply Fraction Multiplication

  6. Lesson 6

    Lesson 6: My Own Flag (Optional)

  7. Lesson 7

    Lesson 7: Concepts of Division (Optional)

  8. Lesson 8

    Lesson 8: Divide Unit Fractions by Whole Numbers

  9. Lesson 9

    Lesson 9: Divide Whole Numbers by Unit Fractions

  10. Lesson 10

    Lesson 10: Fraction Division Situations

  11. Lesson 11

    Lesson 11: Reason About Quotients

  12. Lesson 12Current

    Lesson 12: Represent Multiplication and Division Situations

  13. Lesson 13

    Lesson 13: Fraction Games

Lesson overview

Expand to review the lesson summary and core properties.

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Section 1

Solve Word Problems: Fraction of a Fraction

Property

To find a fraction of a fraction, you multiply the two fractions. This is equivalent to dividing the first fraction by the reciprocal of the second fraction. For a unit fraction 1b\frac{1}{b} and a whole number cc, taking 1c\frac{1}{c} of 1b\frac{1}{b} is calculated as:

1c×1b=1c×b\frac{1}{c} \times \frac{1}{b} = \frac{1}{c \times b}

Examples

  • Maria has 12\frac{1}{2} of a chocolate bar left. She eats 13\frac{1}{3} of the leftover chocolate. The fraction of the original chocolate bar she ate is 13×12=16\frac{1}{3} \times \frac{1}{2} = \frac{1}{6}.
  • A recipe calls for 14\frac{1}{4} cup of flour. If you only want to make half of the recipe, you would need 12\frac{1}{2} of the flour. The amount of flour needed is 12×14=18\frac{1}{2} \times \frac{1}{4} = \frac{1}{8} of a cup.

Explanation

This skill applies the concept of fraction division to real-world scenarios. Often, a word problem will ask for a "fraction of a fraction," such as "one-half of the remaining one-third." The word "of" in this context signifies multiplication. Solving these problems is equivalent to dividing the initial fraction by a whole number, connecting the application directly to the visual models of partitioning a fractional piece.

Section 2

Solve Word Problems Involving Fraction Multiplication

Property

To find a fractional part of a quantity, you multiply the fraction by the quantity. This applies to situations involving scaling recipes, calculating distances, or finding a portion of a given amount. The operation is represented as:

part=fraction×whole \text{part} = \text{fraction} \times \text{whole}

Examples

  • A recipe calls for 34\frac{3}{4} cup of sugar. If you are making 12\frac{1}{2} of the recipe, how much sugar do you need?
12×34=38 cup of sugar \frac{1}{2} \times \frac{3}{4} = \frac{3}{8} \text{ cup of sugar}
  • A runner wants to complete 23\frac{2}{3} of a race that is 910\frac{9}{10} of a mile long. What distance did the runner cover?
23×910=1830=35 of a mile \frac{2}{3} \times \frac{9}{10} = \frac{18}{30} = \frac{3}{5} \text{ of a mile}

Explanation

This skill involves translating real-world scenarios into fraction multiplication problems. Key phrases like "fraction of a quantity" or "part of a total" often indicate that multiplication is needed. To solve, you multiply the numerators together and the denominators together to find the resulting fraction. This skill extends the concept of "fraction of a fraction" to a wider variety of practical applications.

Section 3

Solve Word Problems: Division of a Unit Fraction by a Whole Number

Property

A real-world situation involving sharing or splitting a fractional amount (1b\frac{1}{b}) into a number of equal groups (cc) can be solved using division. The equation is:

1b÷c=1b×c\frac{1}{b} \div c = \frac{1}{b \times c}

Examples

  • There is 12\frac{1}{2} of a pizza left. If 3 friends share it equally, what fraction of the whole pizza does each friend get?
12÷3=16\frac{1}{2} \div 3 = \frac{1}{6}
  • A runner completes 14\frac{1}{4} of a race in 5 minutes, running at a constant speed. What fraction of the total race distance does the runner complete each minute?
14÷5=120\frac{1}{4} \div 5 = \frac{1}{20}

Explanation

These problems require you to divide a unit fraction by a whole number. To solve, identify the initial fractional amount and the number of equal groups it is being divided into. Dividing a unit fraction by a whole number results in a smaller unit fraction. This is because you are splitting an existing part into even smaller pieces.

Section 4

Solve Word Problems: Division of a Whole Number by a Unit Fraction

Property

Dividing a whole number cc by a unit fraction 1b\frac{1}{b} is equivalent to multiplying the whole number by the denominator bb. This answers the question: "How many pieces of size 1b\frac{1}{b} fit into cc wholes?"

c÷1b=c×bc \div \frac{1}{b} = c \times b

Examples

  • A baker has 4 pounds of flour. If each cake recipe requires 13\frac{1}{3} of a pound of flour, how many cakes can the baker make?
4÷13=4×3=12 cakes4 \div \frac{1}{3} = 4 \times 3 = 12 \text{ cakes}
  • A relay race is 5 miles long. If each runner runs for 12\frac{1}{2} of a mile, how many runners are needed for the race?
5÷12=5×2=10 runners5 \div \frac{1}{2} = 5 \times 2 = 10 \text{ runners}

Explanation

This skill involves situations where you need to find out how many fractional parts fit into a whole number. For example, if you have 2 pizzas and you want to know how many 14\frac{1}{4}-pizza slices there are, you are solving 2÷142 \div \frac{1}{4}. Since each whole pizza has 4 quarter slices, 2 pizzas would have 2×4=82 \times 4 = 8 slices. Dividing a whole number by a unit fraction is the same as multiplying the whole number by the denominator of the fraction.

Book overview

Jump across lessons in the current chapter without opening the full course modal.

Continue this chapter

Chapter 3: Multiplying and Dividing Fractions

  1. Lesson 1

    Lesson 1: Represent Unit Fraction Multiplication

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: Multiply Unit Fractions

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Multiply Unit and Non-unit Fractions

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: Generalize Fraction Multiplication

  5. Lesson 5

    Lesson 5: Apply Fraction Multiplication

  6. Lesson 6

    Lesson 6: My Own Flag (Optional)

  7. Lesson 7

    Lesson 7: Concepts of Division (Optional)

  8. Lesson 8

    Lesson 8: Divide Unit Fractions by Whole Numbers

  9. Lesson 9

    Lesson 9: Divide Whole Numbers by Unit Fractions

  10. Lesson 10

    Lesson 10: Fraction Division Situations

  11. Lesson 11

    Lesson 11: Reason About Quotients

  12. Lesson 12Current

    Lesson 12: Represent Multiplication and Division Situations

  13. Lesson 13

    Lesson 13: Fraction Games