Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Multiplying Fractions and Whole Numbers

In this lesson:

  • Multiply a fraction by a whole number using partition-and-count
  • Multiply a fraction by a fraction using area models
  • Tile rectangles with unit fraction squares
  • Create story contexts for fraction multiplication
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Learning Objectives for This Lesson

By the end of this lesson, you will:

  1. Interpret as partitioning and taking
  2. Use visual models for fraction-times-whole-number problems
  3. Use area models for fraction-times-fraction problems
  4. Tile rectangles with unit fraction squares
  5. Create story contexts for fraction multiplication
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

What Does "Two-Thirds of Four" Mean?

  • From our last lesson: multiplying by a fraction means taking a part
  • means "4 groups of one-third"
  • Today's question: what does mean?
  • Read it as: "two-thirds of four"
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Partition and Count: Two-Thirds of Four

Four rectangles partitioned into thirds with 8 pieces shaded

: partition 4 into 3 equal parts, take 2 of them

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Connecting the Visual to Computation

  • We found
  • Notice the pattern: gives the numerator
  • The denominator stays 3
  • General rule:
  • Convert:
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Multiplication Can Make Things Smaller

  • Is more or less than 4? Less!
  • We took only two-thirds of 4 — a part, not the whole
  • When you multiply by a fraction less than 1, the result is smaller
  • Think: "two-thirds of a pizza is less than the whole pizza"
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Quick Check: Predict Before Computing

Will be more or less than 8?

  • , so the product is less than 8
  • Partition 8 into 4 parts, take 3:

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Your Turn: Fraction Times Whole Number

Compute and write a story for it.

  • Partition 8 into ____ equal parts
  • Each part is ____
  • Take ____ of those parts
  • Result: ____

Story starter: "There are 8 ___. Someone takes 3/4 of them..."

Try it, then advance for one possible story.

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Now: A Fraction of a Fraction

  • We can find a fraction of a whole number
  • Next question: what is a fraction of a fraction?
  • Example: means "two-thirds of four-fifths"
  • We will use an area model to see why the answer is
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Area Model: Two-Thirds of Four-Fifths

Unit square showing (2/3) times (4/5) with overlap region

Shade horizontally, then take vertically

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Counting the Pieces: Why the Rule Works

  • Whole square: equal pieces
  • Overlap: pieces
  • Result:
  • Numerator ; Denominator
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

The General Multiplication Rule for Fractions

  • Multiply the numerators to get the new numerator
  • Multiply the denominators to get the new denominator
  • The area model shows why: numerators count shaded pieces, denominators count total pieces
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Second Example: One-Half Times Three-Fourths

  • Shade horizontally (3 of 4 rows)
  • Take vertically (1 of 2 columns)
  • Total pieces:
  • Overlap pieces:

Unit square area model for (1/2) times (3/4)

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Size Check: Products Are Smaller

  • is less than — because
  • is less than — because
  • Both times, we multiplied by a fraction less than 1
  • Pattern: multiplying by a fraction < 1 always shrinks the result
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Quick Check: Apply the Rule

Compute

  • Multiply numerators:
  • Multiply denominators:

Is less than ? Yes —

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Connecting Area Models to Actual Area

  • The area model for fractions is about area
  • A rectangle with sides and has area
  • We can tile it with tiny unit fraction squares
  • The tile count confirms the multiplication
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Tiling a Fractional Rectangle with Unit Squares

Rectangle 2/3 by 4/5 tiled with 1/3 by 1/5 unit squares

Tiles are wide and tall — each tile has area

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Counting Tiles Confirms the Product

  • Tiles across: columns
  • Tiles down: rows
  • Total tiles:
  • Each tile has area
  • Area
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Second Tiling: Three-Fourths by One-Half

  • Tiles: wide and tall → each tile is
  • Columns: 3, Rows: 1 → total tiles: 3
  • Area:
  • Verify:
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Your Turn: Tile a Rectangle

A rectangle has sides and .

  • What size tiles fit exactly? by
  • How many tiles across? How many tiles down?
  • What is each tile's area?
  • What is the total area?

Try it, then check with the multiplication rule.

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Quick Check: What Tiles Fit?

A rectangle has sides and .

  • Tile width: (because the side is fifths)
  • Tile height: (because the side is fourths)
  • Each tile: of the unit square
  • Tiles: → Area:
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Three Models Lead to One Rule

  • Partition-and-count: fraction × whole number
  • Area model: fraction × fraction
  • Tiling: fractional rectangle area
  • All three models lead to the same rule:

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Practice: Apply the Multiplication Rule

Compute each product. Simplify if possible.

For each: is the answer less than the second factor?

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Practice Answers with Size Check

  1. — less than 10 ✓
  2. — less than
  3. — less than

Each product is smaller because each first factor is less than 1.

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Writing Stories for Fraction Multiplication

For : need 10 of something, take

Story: "A carton has 10 eggs. Dani used for breakfast. How many eggs?"

Check: eggs ✓

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Your Turn: Write a Story

Write a word problem for .

  • Start with of something, then take
  • The answer should be

Example: "A sidewalk is mile. Snow covers of it. How much?"

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Exit Ticket: Compute and Create

Compute:

Then write a story that matches this expression.

Check: Is your answer less than ?

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Key Takeaways from Fraction Multiplication

✓ Partition into parts, take

✓ Tiling confirms area = length × width
✓ Fraction < 1 as multiplier shrinks the result

⚠️ Multiply both denominators, not just one
⚠️ Denominators multiply — never add
⚠️ "Of" means multiply, not divide

Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4
Multiplying Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

What Comes Next in Fraction Multiplication

  • Next lesson: Multiplying fractions as scaling (5.NF.B.5)
  • Explore: when does multiplication make things bigger vs. smaller?
  • Key connection: today's "less than" pattern is part of a bigger picture
Grade 5 Math | 5.NF.B.4

Click to begin the narrated lesson

Apply and extend previous understandings of multiplication to multiply a fraction or whole number by a fraction