Day 5: The Magic of Equal Shares | Preparatory Stage (Grades 3, 4 & 5) | Apex Institute of Maths and Sciences

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Day 5: The Magic of Equal Shares | Preparatory Stage (Grades 3, 4 & 5) | Apex Institute of Maths and Sciences

Day 5: The Magic of Equal Shares 🍕

Preparatory Stage (Grades 3, 4 & 5) | Apex Institute of Maths and Sciences

🎯 1. Concept: Equivalent Fractions

Welcome to Day 5! Yesterday we learned that a fraction shows a part of a whole. But did you know that fractions can wear disguises? Sometimes, two fractions have completely different numbers, but they mean the exact same amount!

These are called Equivalent Fractions. (“Equivalent” is just a fancy math word for “Equal in value”).

💡 2. The Pizza Rule

Imagine you have two identical pizzas.

  • Pizza A is cut into 2 big slices. You eat 1 slice. You ate 1/2 of the pizza.
  • Pizza B is cut into 4 smaller slices. You eat 2 slices. You ate 2/4 of the pizza.

If you look at both pizzas, your stomach is exactly the same amount of full! Therefore, 1/2 = 2/4.

The Golden Math Rule: To find an equivalent fraction, whatever you multiply (or divide) the top number by, you MUST do the exact same thing to the bottom number!

Example: Multiply the top and bottom of 1/3 by 2. You get 2/6. They are equivalent!

🌍 3. Math in Our Daily Life

We use equivalent fractions when we measure things in the real world.

Scenario 1 (Money): 50 paise is 1/2 of a Rupee. But if you have 5 ten-paise coins, you have 5/10 of a Rupee. 1/2 and 5/10 are the exact same amount of money!

Scenario 2 (Cooking): A recipe asks for 1/2 a cup of milk, but you only have a 1/4 measuring cup. You can just fill the smaller cup twice! (1/4 + 1/4 = 2/4). 2/4 is exactly the same as 1/2.

📝 4. Home Practice Tasks

Students, try proving equivalent fractions at home today!

  • Task A: The Paper Fold Proof: Take a square piece of paper. Fold it in half and color one side (1/2). Now, fold it in half again. Unfold it. You will see that your colored part is now 2 blocks out of 4 total blocks (2/4). You proved they are equal!
  • Task B: Find the Disguise: Write down the fraction 1/4. Multiply the top and bottom by 3. What is the new disguised fraction? (Hint: it should be out of 12).

✅ 5. Day 5 Application Test

Let’s test your fraction logic! The questions will get harder as you go. Select your answers below and click submit.

Easy
1. What does the word “Equivalent” mean in math?
Solution: Equivalent just means “Equal”. Equivalent fractions look different but hold the exact same value!
Easy
2. You eat 1/2 of a cake. Your brother eats 2/4 of a same-sized cake. Who ate more?
Solution: 1/2 and 2/4 are equivalent fractions. You both ate exactly half of the cake!
Easy
3. What is the Golden Rule for making Equivalent Fractions?
Solution: To keep a fraction equal, you must treat the top (numerator) and bottom (denominator) exactly the same!
Easy
4. Which of these fractions is equivalent to 1/2?
Solution: 5 is exactly half of 10. If you multiply the top and bottom of 1/2 by 5, you get 5/10!
Medium
5. Take the fraction 1/3. Multiply both the top and the bottom by 2. What is your new equivalent fraction?
Solution: Top: 1 × 2 = 2. Bottom: 3 × 2 = 6. The answer is 2/6.
Medium
6. If you have 4/8 of a pizza left over, what is the easiest (simplest) way to tell someone how much pizza you have?
Solution: 4 is exactly half of 8. If you divide the top and bottom by 4, you get 1/2.
Medium
7. Are 2/3 and 4/6 equivalent fractions?
Solution: Yes! If you multiply the top of 2/3 by 2 (gets 4) and the bottom by 2 (gets 6), it works perfectly.
Medium
8. A box has 6 eggs in it. You use 2 eggs to bake a cake (2/6 of the box). What is the simpler equivalent fraction for the eggs you used?
Solution: Divide the top (2) and bottom (6) by 2. You get 1/3. You used one-third of the box!
Hard
9. A friend tells you that 2/4 is equivalent to 3/5. Are they right or wrong?
Solution: Wrong! 2/4 simplifies to 1/2 (Exactly half). 3 is MORE than half of 5. They do not equal the same amount.
Hard
10. Tricky Word Problem: A giant chocolate bar is broken into 12 small squares. You want to eat exactly 1/3 of the chocolate bar. How many small squares should you eat?
Solution: You need an equivalent fraction for 1/3 where the bottom is 12. To turn 3 into 12, multiply by 4. Do the same to the top: 1 × 4 = 4. You should eat 4 squares (4/12)!
⚠️ Please answer all 10 questions before submitting!

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