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      Home > Topdrawer > Fractions > Misunderstandings > Fractions as a double count > Expanding the view

      Expanding the view

      Use the following teaching tips to avoid or change the double-count view of fractions.

      • Read fractions as single numbers rather than a part-whole description using two numbers (e.g. say 'three-quarters' instead of 'three out of four').
      • Accompany part-whole models, such as area diagrams, with fractions placed on a number line.
      • Strengthen students' sense of the relative size of fractions through visualising tasks. An example is the activity Fraction Wheel.
      • Use 'counting by fractions' of the same denominator to reinforce the concept of fractions as numbers. An example is the activity Sequencing and Counting.
      • Use sharing division tasks to explore the division meaning for fractions. An example is the activity Dividing Pancakes.
      • Discuss with students what fractions actually are and the variety of ways in which they can be represented and used.

      Year 2: Recognise and interpret common uses of halves, quarters and eighths of shapes and collections

      Year 3: Model and represent unit fractions including 1/2, 1/4, 1/3, 1/5 and their multiples to a complete whole

      Year 4: Count by quarters halves and thirds, including with mixed numerals. Locate and represent these fractions on a number line

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