Fractions - Class 5 Mathematics (CBSE)
Based on the current NCERT Maths Mela Grade 5 sequence. Read the idea, try the activity, then solve the practice set without looking at the answers.
1. Why this chapter matters
Fractions uses familiar Class 5 situations to make mathematics feel usable. Instead of treating maths as a list of sums, this chapter asks students to notice information, choose a method, explain the method, and check whether the answer makes sense.
The main focus is seeing fractions as equal parts, shares, collections, and points on a number line. This is useful in notebooks, oral questions, class activities, and competency-based school tests because teachers often ask students to explain how they know, not just write the final number.
2. Core ideas
Idea 1
A fraction names equal parts of a whole.
Method 2
The denominator tells how many equal parts, and the numerator tells how many are taken.
Skill 3
Equivalent fractions look different but show the same value.
3. Worked examples
Example 1: Shade 3 out of 8 equal parts. What fraction is shaded?
The shaded fraction is 3/8.
Check: The answer uses the correct operation and keeps the unit or context clear.
Example 2: Which is bigger: 1/2 or 1/4?
With the same whole, 1/2 is bigger because two equal parts are larger than four smaller parts.
Check: The answer uses the correct operation and keeps the unit or context clear.
4. Activity corner
Fold a paper strip into halves, fourths, and eighths. Label each fold and notice which fractions line up.
Write your activity answer in three parts:
- What I observed
- What I calculated or compared
- What mathematical idea this shows
5. Common mistakes
- Mistake: Solving before reading the whole word problem Fix: Circle the data, underline the question, and then choose the operation.
- Mistake: Forgetting units such as cm, m, kg, L, minutes, or rupees Fix: Write the unit with every final answer.
- Mistake: Doing only exact calculation without checking reasonableness Fix: Use estimation or reverse operation to catch impossible answers.
6. How to write better answers
- Write the given numbers and units first.
- Show the operation or reasoning step.
- Use a diagram, table, grid, or number line if it makes the answer clearer.
- Write the final answer in a complete sentence.
- Check the answer by estimation, reverse operation, or common sense.
7. Practice set
- What does the denominator show?
- Write a fraction for 5 mangoes out of 12 mangoes.
- Which is greater, 3/4 or 2/4?
- Write one fraction equal to 1/2.
- A ribbon is cut into 6 equal pieces. Mira uses 2 pieces. What fraction did she use?
- Why must parts be equal in a fraction?
8. Answer key
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What does the denominator show? Answer: It shows the number of equal parts in the whole.
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Write a fraction for 5 mangoes out of 12 mangoes. Answer: 5/12.
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Which is greater, 3/4 or 2/4? Answer: 3/4 is greater because the denominator is same and 3 is more than 2.
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Write one fraction equal to 1/2. Answer: 2/4, 3/6, or 4/8.
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A ribbon is cut into 6 equal pieces. Mira uses 2 pieces. What fraction did she use? Answer: 2/6, which is equal to 1/3.
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Why must parts be equal in a fraction? Answer: Unequal parts do not show fair shares, so the fraction name becomes misleading.
9. Quick revision
- Main focus: seeing fractions as equal parts, shares, collections, and points on a number line.
- A fraction names equal parts of a whole.
- The denominator tells how many equal parts, and the numerator tells how many are taken.
- Equivalent fractions look different but show the same value.
- Learn by doing the activity once, not by memorising only the final answers.
- Keep units clear and show steps for partial marks.
