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

  • 1Define a fraction as equal parts of a whole, identifying numerator and denominator
  • 2Distinguish between like, unlike, and equivalent fractions
  • 3Generate equivalent fractions by multiplying/dividing numerator and denominator
  • 4Compare fractions using common denominators (LCM method)
  • 5Order fractions in ascending or descending order
  • 6Add and subtract like fractions directly
  • 7Add and subtract unlike fractions using the LCM method
  • 8Apply fraction operations to real-life word problems
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Why this chapter matters
Fractions are the bridge between whole numbers and the continuous world of measurement. They are essential for decimals, percentages, ratios, proportions, and algebra in higher classes. Without a solid understanding of fractions, students struggle with virtually every advanced math topic from Class 7 onwards.

Before you start — revise these

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

Fractions — Class 6 Maths (Ganita Prakash)

1. About This Chapter

Fractions are everywhere — dividing a pizza among friends, measuring half a cup of milk, or saying "quarter past three." Chapter 7 of Ganita Prakash builds a thorough understanding of fractions, starting from the basics and progressing through types, comparison, and arithmetic operations. By the end, students should see fractions not as abstract symbols but as practical tools for sharing, measuring, and comparing.


2. What Is a Fraction?

A fraction represents equal parts of a whole. It is written as:

  • Numerator (top): The number of parts we have
  • Denominator (bottom): The total number of equal parts the whole is divided into

Example: means the whole is divided into 8 equal parts, and we have 3 of them.


3. Types of Fractions

Like Fractions

Fractions with the same denominator.

Examples:

Like fractions are easy to compare and add — just work with the numerators.

Unlike Fractions

Fractions with different denominators.

Examples:

To compare or add unlike fractions, first convert them to like fractions.

Equivalent Fractions

Fractions that represent the same value even though they look different.

To find equivalent fractions: multiply or divide both numerator and denominator by the same number.


4. Comparing Fractions

Rule 1: Same Denominator

If denominators are the same, the fraction with the larger numerator is larger.

Rule 2: Same Numerator

If numerators are the same, the fraction with the smaller denominator is larger.

Rule 3: Different Numerators and Denominators

Convert to equivalent fractions with a common denominator (LCM of the denominators), then compare.

Compare and :

  • LCM of 5 and 3 = 15
  • ,
  • , so

5. Ordering Fractions

Arrange in ascending order.

Solution:

  • LCM of 3, 6, 12 = 12
  • , ,
  • Ascending:
  • Answer:

6. Addition of Fractions

Like Fractions (Same Denominator)

Simply add the numerators, keep the denominator same.

Unlike Fractions (Different Denominators)

Step 1: Find LCM of denominators.
Step 2: Convert each fraction to an equivalent fraction with the LCM as denominator.
Step 3: Add the numerators, keep denominator same.
Step 4: Simplify if possible.

Example:

  • LCM of 2 and 3 = 6
  • ,

7. Subtraction of Fractions

Same rules as addition — just subtract instead.

Like Fractions:

Unlike Fractions:

  • LCM of 4 and 3 = 12
  • ,

8. Fractions in Daily Life

  • Cooking: "Add cup of sugar and cup of oil"
  • Time: "Quarter past three" = of an hour
  • Money: "Half the price" =
  • Sharing: of a pizza each
  • Measurement: metre of cloth

9. Key Concepts Summary

ConceptDefinitionExample
FractionEqual parts of a whole (3 of 4 equal parts)
Like FractionsSame denominator
Unlike FractionsDifferent denominators
Equivalent FractionsSame value, different look
LCM MethodUse LCM to make denominators sameFor , LCM=6

10. Worked Examples

Example 1: Equivalent fractions

Find two equivalent fractions for .

Solution: Multiply by 2: . Multiply by 3: .

Example 2: Compare

Which is larger: or ?

Solution: LCM of 4 and 6 = 12. , . , so .

Example 3: Word problem

Riya ate of a chocolate bar and her friend ate . How much did they eat together?

Solution: . They ate of the chocolate bar together.


11. Conclusion

Fractions connects number sense with real-life sharing and measuring. Understanding fractions deeply — not just memorizing rules — is essential because fractions are the gateway to decimals, percentages, ratios, algebra, and virtually every advanced mathematical concept. The key is practice: comparing, converting, adding, and subtracting fractions until the LCM method becomes second nature.

Key formulas & results

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

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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.

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Practice problems

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

Q1MEDIUM
Find three equivalent fractions for 4/7.
Show solution
8/14, 12/21, 16/28 (multiply by 2, 3, 4 respectively)
Q2MEDIUM
Add: 2/5 + 3/10
Show solution
7/10
Q3MEDIUM
A recipe needs 3/4 cup flour and 1/2 cup sugar. What is the total?
Show solution
5/4 = 1¼ cups total
Q4MEDIUM
Which is larger: 7/10 or 5/8?
Show solution
7/10 is larger. (7/10 = 28/40, 5/8 = 25/40; 28 > 25)

5-minute revision

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

  • Numerator = parts we have, Denominator = total equal parts
  • Equivalent fractions: multiply/divide BOTH by same number
  • Like fractions: same denominator, easy to add/subtract/compare
  • Unlike fractions: find LCM, convert, then operate
  • Adding unlike fractions: LCM → convert → add numerators → simplify
  • Always check if the final answer can be simplified
  • Larger denominator = smaller pieces (for same numerator)

CBSE marks blueprint

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

Where this shows up in the real world

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

Questions students ask

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

Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 1 June 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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