Visualizing Benchmark Comparisons with Area Models
Visualizing Benchmark Comparisons with Area Models is a Grade 4 math skill in enVision Mathematics, Chapter 8: Extend Understanding of Fraction Equivalence and Ordering. Students compare fractions to benchmark values like 0, 1/2, and 1 using shaded area models to determine which fraction is greater.
Key Concepts
To compare a fraction to a benchmark using an area model, shade the area representing the fraction and visually compare it to the area representing the benchmark (e.g., $\frac{1}{2}$ or $1$).
Common Questions
What are benchmark fractions?
Benchmark fractions are common reference fractions used for comparison, primarily 0, 1/2, and 1. Other fractions are compared to these benchmarks to determine their relative size.
How do you use an area model to compare fractions to benchmarks?
Shade a rectangle to represent each fraction and compare the shaded amount to half or the full rectangle. More or less shading than 1/2 tells you if the fraction is greater or less than 1/2.
How do you compare 3/5 to 1/2 using an area model?
Shade 3 of 5 equal sections for 3/5. Since 1/2 of 5 sections would be 2.5 sections, and 3 sections is more, 3/5 is greater than 1/2.
Why is comparing to benchmarks useful in Grade 4?
Benchmark comparisons allow quick estimates of fraction size without finding a common denominator, developing number sense about fraction magnitudes.
What chapter covers benchmark fraction comparisons in enVision Grade 4?
Benchmark comparisons with area models are covered in Chapter 8: Extend Understanding of Fraction Equivalence and Ordering in enVision Mathematics Grade 4.