Teaching & Learning

All About Fractions

Over the next few weeks some of our students will be learning all about fractions, decimals and ratio. This week we will give you a task and some tips to help you practice these Maths skills at home. Cooking with math is always a fun way to reinforce general math skills. With this activity, you'll be practicing adding and subtracting fractions, but the activity can be modified to refresh multiplication, division, and more.

 

Most importantly, you'll be having fun spending time with your child and enjoying the opportunity to learn together.

Practice These Skills At Home

What you'll need:

 

-Clear container

-Masking Tape

-Marker

-Measuring Cups (1/2, 1/3 or 1/4 cup measure)

-Uncooked rice or popcorn kernels

-Water

 

What to Do: 

 

1. Have your child stick a piece of masking tape straight up one side of the clear container from the bottom to the top.

 

2. For younger children, use a 1/2 cup measure. For older children, use a 1/3 or 1/4 cup measure. Choose the unit of measure and fill the measuring cup. Then let your child pour the substance from the measuring cup into the clear container. Continue to pour the same amount of the substance into the container.

 

3. As each equal amount of the substance is poured, mark the level on the container by drawing a line on the tape. Write the cup size or appropriate fraction on each line. The fraction for one-third cup would be 1/3.

 

4. Follow this procedure until the container is full and the tape is marked in increments to the top of the container.

 

5. Fill the container again and again using different measures each time. Ask your child "thinking" questions like:

 

-How many whole cups do you think this container will hold? How many 1/2 cups, 1/3 cups, or 1/4 cups do you think the container will hold?

-How many 1/2 cups equal a cup?

-How many 1/4 cups equal 1/2 cup? A cup?

-How many 1/4 cups equal 3/4 cup?

 

Parent Pointer

This hands-on activity explores whole numbers and fractions by using measurements your children can see. Your children also will learn to guess or estimate quantities.

 

Kirrily Lamers

Assistant Principal