By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Divide a shape or object into equal parts
  • 2Name one half (½) and one quarter (¼)
  • 3Know that two halves or four quarters make a whole
  • 4Find half and a quarter of a small number
  • 5Compare the size of a half and a quarter
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Why this chapter matters
Fair Share builds the first idea of fractions through equal sharing. Children divide shapes and objects into halves and quarters, learn the fraction names ½ and ¼, and understand that fair means equal — preparing them for formal fractions later.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Fair Share — Class 3 Mathematics (CBSE)

From the current NCERT Maths Mela Grade 3 book, Chapter 8. Sharing a chapati, a chocolate, or a mango fairly leads us to halves, quarters, and the first idea of fractions.


1. Why this chapter matters

Sharing fairly means everyone gets an equal part. This simple idea is the start of fractions — halves and quarters — which we use to cut food, tell time, and measure. Learning equal parts now makes fractions easy later.

2. Core ideas

Idea 1 — Equal parts are fair shares

Two equal parts are halves; four equal parts are quarters. Unequal parts are not fair.

Method 2 — Half and quarter have fraction names

One half is written ½; one quarter is written ¼. Two halves make a whole; four quarters make a whole.

Skill 3 — Sharing a number equally

Half of 8 is 4 (8 shared into 2 equal groups). A quarter of 8 is 2.

3. Worked examples

Example 1: A chapati is shared between 2 children. What part does each get?

Each gets one half (½) of the chapati.

Example 2: What is half of 10 mangoes?

10 shared into 2 equal groups → 5 mangoes each.

Example 3: A chocolate is broken into 4 equal pieces. What is each piece called?

Each piece is one quarter (¼) of the chocolate.

4. Activity corner

Fold a square paper to show halves, then fold again to show quarters. Colour one half on one paper and one quarter on another. Write:

  • What I folded (halves or quarters)
  • How many equal parts I made
  • The maths idea (equal parts and their fraction names)

5. Common mistakes

  • Mistake: Cutting into unequal parts and calling them halves. Fix: Halves and quarters must be equal parts.
  • Mistake: Thinking a bigger number of pieces means a bigger piece. Fix: A quarter (¼) is smaller than a half (½) of the same thing.
  • Mistake: Forgetting that the parts must rejoin to the whole. Fix: Two halves, or four quarters, make one whole.

6. How to write better answers

  1. Check the parts are equal.
  2. Name the part: half (½) or quarter (¼).
  3. For numbers, share equally into 2 or 4 groups.
  4. State the answer with the unit.

7. Practice set

  1. What do we call one of two equal parts?
  2. Write the fraction for one quarter.
  3. What is half of 6 apples?
  4. How many quarters make one whole?
  5. A ribbon is cut into 4 equal parts. What is each part called?
  6. Which is bigger: a half or a quarter of the same cake?

8. Answer key

  1. One half (½).
  2. One quarter is ¼.
  3. Half of 6 = 3 apples.
  4. 4 quarters make one whole.
  5. Each part is one quarter (¼).
  6. A half is bigger than a quarter of the same cake.

9. Quick revision

  • Fair sharing means equal parts.
  • Two equal parts are halves (½); four equal parts are quarters (¼).
  • Two halves, or four quarters, make one whole.
  • Half of 8 is 4; a quarter of 8 is 2.
  • A half is bigger than a quarter of the same thing.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Core idea
Two equal parts are halves; four equal parts are quarters.
Parts must be equal to be fair.
Math move
One half = 1/2, one quarter = 1/4; two halves or four quarters make a whole.
Fold or cut into equal parts to see this.
Exam habit
Half of 8 is 4; a quarter of 8 is 2.
Share the number into 2 or 4 equal groups.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Cutting into unequal parts and calling them halves
Halves and quarters must be equal parts.
WATCH OUT
Thinking more pieces means a bigger piece
A quarter is smaller than a half of the same thing.
WATCH OUT
Forgetting the parts rejoin to the whole
Two halves, or four quarters, make one whole.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Concept
What do we call one of two equal parts?
Show solution
One half.
Q2EASY· Fraction
Write the fraction for one quarter.
Show solution
1/4.
Q3EASY· Apply
What is half of 6 apples?
Show solution
3 apples.
Q4MEDIUM· Concept
How many quarters make one whole?
Show solution
4 quarters make one whole.
Q5MEDIUM· Apply
A ribbon is cut into 4 equal parts. What is each part called?
Show solution
Each part is one quarter (1/4).
Q6HARD· Compare
Which is bigger, a half or a quarter of the same cake, and why?
Show solution
A half is bigger, because the cake is shared into only 2 equal parts instead of 4, so each part is larger.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Fair Share is Chapter 8 of the Class 3 Maths Mela textbook.
  • Fair sharing means equal parts.
  • Two equal parts are halves (1/2); four equal parts are quarters (1/4).
  • Two halves, or four quarters, make one whole.
  • Half of 8 is 4; a quarter of 8 is 2.
  • A half is bigger than a quarter of the same thing.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 3-4 marks in school tests, oral checks, notebooks, and activities

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Very Short12-3Naming halves and quarters or finding half of a number
Short Answer21-2Equal parts of shapes or quarters of a whole
Activity / Project30-1Folding and colouring halves and quarters
Prep strategy
  • Fold paper to make halves and quarters
  • Practise finding half and a quarter of small numbers
  • Remember two halves and four quarters make a whole
  • Compare the sizes of a half and a quarter

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Sharing food fairly

Cutting chapatis, fruits, and cakes into equal parts uses halves and quarters.

Telling time

Half past and quarter past an hour come from these fraction ideas.

Measuring

Half a litre or a quarter kilogram are everyday measurements.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Underline the command word: name, write, half, or quarter
  2. Check that parts are equal before naming them
  3. Share numbers into 2 or 4 equal groups
  4. Give the answer with the unit

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Show two different ways to cut a square into four equal parts.
  • If a quarter of a number is 3, what is the whole number?

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 3 School AssessmentHigh
Class 3 Foundation / Olympiad PracticeMedium
Notebook and Activity EvaluationHigh

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

A fair share means every part is equal. Two equal parts are halves and four equal parts are quarters.

A quarter shares the whole into 4 equal parts, while a half shares it into only 2, so each quarter piece is smaller.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 31 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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