Fractions require equal partitioning of the whole
Write a fraction that tells what part of the whole is shaded.
(Figure) A rectangle has tick marks along each side that divide the whole rectangle into 32 equal-size cells. A portion of the rectangle is shaded orange.
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Understand
A rectangle is partitioned by tick marks into 32 equal cells (an 8-by-4 grid). Part of it is shaded orange. Write, as a fraction, what part of the whole rectangle is shaded.
- The whole rectangle is divided into 32 equal-size cells (8 columns by 4 rows)
- Each cell is the same size, so each cell is 1/32 of the whole
- From the figure, the shaded orange region covers 7 of the 8 columns across the top 3 of the 4 rows
- The fraction of the whole rectangle that is shaded
- The whole must be divided into equal parts to name a fraction
- The fraction is shaded cells over total cells, written in simplest form
Plan
#1 Draw a Diagram · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems
The grid is already a diagram of equal parts, so we count shaded cells against the total. Breaking the count into rows and columns (a subproblem) makes the shaded count quick and reliable.
Execute
Review
The unshaded region is the rightmost column plus the bottom row, which is more than half a column of the picture but well under half the rectangle, so the shaded part should be a bit more than 1/2 of the whole; 21/32 is about 0.66, which matches the picture being mostly orange.
Change focus to the complement (tool 16): the unshaded cells are the 8 bottom-row cells plus the 3 remaining cells of the right column, which is 8 + 3 = 11 cells, so 11/32 is unshaded and the shaded part is 1 - 11/32 = 21/32.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NF.A.1Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Naming the shaded amount as 21/32 of the whole3.G.A.2Partition shapes into equal parts with equal areas — Recognizing the 32 cells as equal parts of the rectangle