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Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Fractions as Division: Understanding

5.NF.B.3

In this lesson:

  • The fraction bar means "divided by"
  • Fair sharing proves why
  • Solve word problems where the answer is a fraction
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Learning Objectives for This Lesson

By the end of this lesson, you will:

  1. Explain why equals
  2. Express division answers as fractions or mixed numbers
  3. Verify answers by multiplying back
  4. Solve word problems with fractional answers
  5. Place fractional quotients between consecutive whole numbers
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

What Does the Fraction Bar Mean?

Look at these fraction facts you already know:

  • Each fraction equals a whole-number quotient
  • means the same as 6 ÷ 2
  • The fraction bar IS a division sign
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Unit Fractions Come from Division Too

What is 1 ÷ 2? You already know — it's one-half.

  • Dividing 1 by any number gives a unit fraction
  • The divisor becomes the denominator
  • The pattern works every time
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

From Division to Fraction: Three Divided by Four

What is 3 ÷ 4? Think: 3 cookies shared among 4 friends.

  • The dividend (3) becomes the numerator — what is shared
  • The divisor (4) becomes the denominator — how many share
  • Rule: for any whole numbers
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Your Turn: Write Divisions as Fractions

Write each division as a fraction:

  1. 5 ÷ 6 = ?
  2. 2 ÷ 7 = ?
  3. 9 ÷ 10 = ?

Bonus: Does 10 ÷ 5 = 10/5? What does that simplify to?

Think before advancing to the next slide...

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Fair Sharing Proves the Rule

Scenario: 3 granola bars shared among 4 people.

  • Cut each bar into 4 equal pieces
  • 3 bars → 3 × 4 = 12 pieces total
  • Each person gets 12 ÷ 4 = 3 pieces
  • Each piece is → each person gets
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Visualizing Fair Sharing: Three Among Four

Three rectangular bars each divided into 4 equal parts, with color-coded distribution to 4 people

Each person collects one piece from each bar → 3 fourths

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Counting Each Person's Share Precisely

From the diagram:

  • Each person gets 1 piece from each bar → 3 pieces
  • Each piece is of a bar
  • Total per person:

Shared (3) = numerator. People (4) = denominator.

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

The Multiplication Check: Proving Your Answer

If , then should equal 3.

  • 4 people × each = 3 bars total
  • Multiply quotient × divisor to verify any division
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Mixed Number Result: Five Divided by Two

5 cookies shared among 2 people:

Five circles each divided in half, with halves distributed to two groups of 2.5 each

  • Check:
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Your Turn: Draw and Verify

Draw a picture showing 2 items shared among 5 people.

  • What fraction does each person get?
  • Check: Does ?

Sketch your diagram, then advance for confirmation...

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

When Division Doesn't Come Out Evenly

In earlier grades, you wrote remainders: 50 ÷ 9 = 5 R 5

Now the remainder becomes a fraction:

  • The remainder (5) is still shared among 9 people
  • Leftover fraction = remainder ÷ divisor =
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Worked Example: Sharing Fifty Pounds of Rice

9 people share a 50-pound sack of rice equally.

Step 1: Set up the division: 50 ÷ 9

Step 2: Divide: 9 × 5 = 45, remainder = 50 − 45 = 5

Step 3: Write the answer:

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Rice Problem: Verify and Place on Number Line

Verify:

Reasonableness: Between which two whole numbers?

  • 9 × 5 = 45 (not enough) and 9 × 6 = 54 (too much)
  • So is between 5 and 6
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Placing a Fractional Answer on the Number Line

Number line from 5 to 6 with 5 and 5/9 marked slightly past the midpoint

  • is slightly more than , so closer to 6
  • Placing the answer confirms it's reasonable
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Worked Example: When the Answer Simplifies

A 6-meter ribbon is cut into 8 equal pieces.

  • Simplify:
  • Between 0 and 1 (since 6 < 8)
  • Verify:
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Your Turn: Solve a Word Problem

An 8-foot board is cut into 6 equal pieces.

  • What division do you write?
  • What fraction is each piece?
  • Between which two whole numbers does the answer lie?
  • Does the multiplication check work?

Solve, then advance...

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

The Key Equation: Fractions Equal Division

  • Every fraction is a division problem
  • Every whole-number division produces a fraction
  • The fraction bar has always meant "divided by"

This is not a new rule — it is what fractions mean.

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Match Each Division to Its Fraction

Division Fraction or Mixed Number
3 ÷ 7 ?
9 ÷ 4 ?
4 ÷ 6 ?
15 ÷ 5 ?

Write your answers, then advance to check...

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Matching Activity Answers and Simplifications Revealed

Division Fraction Simplified
3 ÷ 7
9 ÷ 4
4 ÷ 6
15 ÷ 5 3
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Multi-Step Problem: Dividing Farming Acres Equally

23 acres divided equally among 6 plots:

  • Each plot needs at least 4 acres to be profitable
  • plots are too small
  • Verify:
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Reasoning Challenge: Is Jordan Correct?

Jordan says: "12/5 is not a division problem because 12 is bigger than 5 — you can't divide a smaller number by a larger number."

Two-column comparison showing Jordan's claim on left and the correct reasoning on right

What would you say to Jordan?

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

Key Takeaways from Fractions as Division

✓ Fraction bar means "divided by":

✓ Fair sharing proves it visually

✓ Verify:

⚠️ Dividend on top, divisor on bottom

⚠️ Fractions CAN be greater than 1

⚠️ Remainder goes over the divisor, not the dividend

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3
Fractions as Division | Lesson 1 of 1

What Comes Next in Fraction Operations

You've learned that .

Next up in 5.NF:

  • 5.NF.B.4 — Multiplying fractions, building on today's division idea
  • 5.NF.B.7 — Dividing fractions by fractions

Today's concept is the foundation for all fraction operations ahead!

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.3