Build largest and smallest mixed numbers from cards
From number cards, choose of them and use each one exactly once to make a mixed number whose denominator is . Find the sum of the largest mixed number and the smallest mixed number you can make this way.
Number cards: , , ,
Show solution
Understand
From the four cards 5, 8, 4, 6 I pick two cards. One becomes the whole part and the other becomes the numerator over a denominator of 7, making a mixed number like W N/7. I want the biggest and smallest such mixed numbers, then their sum.
- Number cards available: 5, 8, 4, 6.
- Use exactly two cards, each once, to form a mixed number.
- The denominator is fixed at 7.
- A mixed number has the form (whole) (numerator/7).
- The largest mixed number that can be made.
- The smallest mixed number that can be made.
- The sum of the largest and smallest.
- Numerator must be less than 7 for a proper fraction part (5, 4, and 6 qualify; 8 cannot be a numerator).
- Each card is used at most once within one mixed number.
Plan
#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List
To get the biggest number, make the whole part as big as possible, then the numerator as big as possible; to get the smallest, make the whole part as small as possible. Test the card choices and check the constraint that a numerator must be under 7.
Execute
Review
Largest ≈ 8.86 and smallest ≈ 4.71 sum to about 13.57, which matches 13 4/7. The key catch — 8 cannot be a numerator because the fraction part must be under 7 — was respected, so the smallest correctly uses 5/7 not 8/7.
Systematically list all valid mixed numbers (tool 2): whole from {4,5,6,8}, numerator from the remaining cards under 7. The max is 8 6/7 and the min is 4 5/7, giving the same sum 13 4/7.
Standards · min grade 4
4.NF.A.2Compare two fractions with different numerators and different denominators — Reasoning about which card choices make the mixed number largest or smallest.4.NF.B.3Understand a fraction with numerator greater than one as sum of unit fractions — Adding the two mixed numbers and regrouping 11/7 into a whole plus a proper fraction.