SOLUTION: I would be grateful for any help her. I am confused and not sure how to explain. Thank you in advance. When 2 fractions have the same denominator, we add or subtract them by k

Algebra ->  Percentage-and-ratio-word-problems -> SOLUTION: I would be grateful for any help her. I am confused and not sure how to explain. Thank you in advance. When 2 fractions have the same denominator, we add or subtract them by k      Log On


   



Question 1186575: I would be grateful for any help her. I am confused and not sure how to explain. Thank you in advance.
When 2 fractions have the same denominator, we add or subtract them by keeping the same denominator & adding or subtracting the numerators. Example:
Patti says: We should add the tops AND the bottoms. She shows you this picture to explain why:
S _ _ _ _ + S S S _ _ =S _ _ _ _ S S S _ _ make blocks in here. The S's mean that is
a block that is shaded. So according to Patti: 1/5 + 3/5 = 1+3 =4/10
5+5
Explain what is wrong with Patti's reasoning. In your explanation use our definition of fractions (our definition of fractions is from Common Core State Standards)
How could Patti use benchmark fractions to realize her answer is wrong?

Answer by MathLover1(20850) About Me  (Show Source):
You can put this solution on YOUR website!

a. Petti’s method is not valid because she added both denominators (which changes total) instead of keeping it same, and add only numerators like this:
1%2F5 and 3%2F5+ have same denominator, so
1%2F5%2B+3%2F5=%281%2B3%29%2F5=4%2F5

b. how could Patti use estimation and benchmark fractions to see if her answer is reasonable?
Benchmark fractions are easy to visualize and identify, and thus, help in estimating the parts.(she can also count all green squares, total is 4)
Benchmark fractions are especially helpful on number lines.
draw a number line, divide the distance from 0 to+1+into 5 equal pieces, each of them represents 1%2F5
staring from 0, go one step to the right (draw a vertical line at+1%2F5) and 3 more steps to the right (draw second vertical line at 4%2F5)
so, it’s easy to see that you are 4%2F5 of unit away from zero
Solved by pluggable solver: SHOWS addition on the number line, positive and negative numbers
3/5 is a positive number. When you add it, it shifts the number to the right by 3/5 units.
This s a cartoon:



c. only using proper way, we will get correct answer
Patti’s answer 4%2F10 is incorrect, when we simplify it we get 2%2F5 (which would be correct only if she have 3%2F5-1%2F5)