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Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Dividing Fractions by Fractions

Lesson 1 of 1: The Number System

In this lesson:

  • Interpret fraction division two ways
  • Use number lines and area models
  • Apply the invert-and-multiply algorithm
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Learning Objectives for This Lesson

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

  1. Explain what fraction division means using measurement and partitive interpretations
  2. Use number line and area models to represent fraction division
  3. Compute quotients of fractions using the invert-and-multiply algorithm
  4. Justify why invert-and-multiply works using multiplication and division as inverse operations
  5. Solve and interpret word problems involving division of fractions by fractions
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

What Does Division Actually Mean?

— but there are two different stories:

  • Measurement: "12 cookies, bags of 4. How many bags?" → 3 bags
  • Partitive: "12 cookies, 4 friends equally. How many each?" → 3 each

Same expression. Different meaning. Both apply to fractions too.

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Two Ways to Interpret Fraction Division

Measurement: "How many groups of size [divisor] fit in [dividend]?"

  • Divisor = size of each group — you count groups

Partitive: "Split [dividend] into [divisor] equal parts — how large is each?"

  • Divisor = number of parts — you find one share
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Measurement Story: Rice and Servings

Problem: You have cup of rice. Each serving is cup.

How many servings do you have?

→ "How many -cups fit in cup?" — this is measurement

Count: three -cups fit → answer: 3

Number line from 0 to 1 showing three 1/4-cup segments marked inside a 3/4 span

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Partitive Story: Pizza and Friends

of a pizza shared equally among 3 friends. How much each?

→ "Split into 3 equal parts" — partitive

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Check-In: Write a Story for

Write one measurement story for this expression.

Then reason out the answer — without any algorithm.

Think: how many -sized groups fit in ?

Advance to the next slide to see the answer.

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Seeing Division: Number Line Models

Visual models let us see the quotient before computing it.

Two key ideas:

  • Mark the dividend on the number line
  • Count how many divisor-sized segments fit inside it

We will build intuition through three examples — starting with whole-number results, then a fractional result.

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Number Line Examples: Two Whole-Number Quotients

Example 1:

Count three -segments in → quotient = 3

Example 2:

Subdivide into sixths; count four -segments in → quotient = 4

Two number lines stacked: top divided into fourths showing 3/4 span with 3 segments marked; bottom divided into sixths showing 2/3 span with 4 segments marked

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Number Line: When the Quotient Is a Fraction

How many -unit segments fit in ?

  • , so less than one full segment fits
  • Mark within the first -unit interval
  • Ask: what fraction of one -unit is ?

Since , the answer is .

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Area Model: The Land Strip Problem

Problem: A rectangular strip has area sq mi and length mi. How wide is it?

Area = length × width, so width = area ÷ length:

Rectangle with length 3/4 labeled on one side and area 1/2 shaded inside; unknown width marked with question mark

The area model shows: width = mi

Verify:

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Check-In: Greater or Less Than 1?

Before computing: is the quotient greater than 1 or less than 1?

Think: how does compare to ?

, so more than one group of fits → quotient > 1

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Why the Invert-and-Multiply Rule Works

If , then

Multiply both sides by (the reciprocal of ):

Check:

Dividing = multiplying by the reciprocal of the divisor.

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Invert and Multiply: The Four-Step Algorithm

Rule:

Four steps:

  1. Identify the divisor (the fraction after ÷)
  2. Write its reciprocal (flip numerator and denominator)
  3. Multiply numerators together, denominators together
  4. Simplify the result

Step-by-step diagram: (a/b) ÷ (c/d) → (a/b) × (d/c) → ad/bc with arrows and labels identifying divisor and reciprocal

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Worked Examples 1 and 2

Example 1:

Divisor: → reciprocal:

Example 2:

Divisor: → reciprocal:

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Worked Examples 3 and 4

Example 3: — result greater than 1

Divisor: → reciprocal:

Example 4: — simplify before multiplying

Divisor: → reciprocal:

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Your Turn: Compute

Follow the four steps:

  1. Identify the divisor: ____
  2. Write its reciprocal: ____
  3. Multiply: ____ = ____
  4. Simplify: ____

Pause and work through all four steps before advancing.

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Answer:

Divisor → reciprocal

Verify:

Reasonableness: → quotient , and

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Word Problem Framework: Five Steps

  1. Identify the two quantities: total, and group size or number of groups
  2. Classify: measurement ("how many groups?") or partitive ("how much per group?")
  3. Write the expression: total ÷ group size (or total ÷ number of parts)
  4. Compute using invert-and-multiply
  5. Interpret the quotient — check reasonableness
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Word Problem 1: Chocolate Sharing

"3 people share lb equally. How much each?"

  • Partitive: split into 3 parts
  • Expression: lb per person
  • Reasonable: each share total
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Word Problem 2: Yogurt Servings

"How many -cup servings in cup of yogurt?"

  • Measurement: how many -groups fit in ?
  • Expression: of a serving
  • Reasonable: → less than 1 full serving,
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Word Problem 3: Land Strip

Strip with area sq mi, length mi. How wide?

  • Area ÷ length = width → mi
  • Verify:
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Your Turn: Create a Story Context

Create two story contexts for :

  • Measurement: "How many -sized groups fit in ?"
  • Partitive: " split into of a group — how much is each?"

Both answers should equal .

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Practice: Two More Word Problems

A: Recipe needs cup per batch. You have cup. How many batches?

B: Hiker goes mile in hour. What speed in mph?

Write the division expression first, then compute.

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Practice: Worked Solutions and Checks

A: batch

→ less than one batch ✓

B: mph

→ speed above 1 mph ✓

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

Key Takeaways for This Lesson

✓ Division has two interpretations: measurement (how many groups?) and partitive (how much per group?)

✓ Visual models — number lines and area models — reveal the quotient before computing

Algorithm: — multiply by the reciprocal of the divisor

✓ Justify: if is the quotient, then divisor × = dividend — always verify

✓ For word problems: identify the interpretation, write the expression, compute, check reasonableness

⚠️ Watch out: — do NOT divide numerators and denominators

⚠️ Watch out: Flip the divisor (second fraction), NOT the dividend

⚠️ Watch out: Flip first, then multiply — not the other way around

⚠️ Watch out: For "how many 3/4-cup servings in 2/3 cup?" → total (2/3) ÷ group size (3/4)

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1
Dividing Fractions by Fractions | Lesson 1 of 1

What Comes Next in Grade 6

Coming up in 6.NS: multi-digit decimals, GCF, LCM

Fraction division reappears in:

  • 6.EE.B.7 — solving
  • 7.NS.A — dividing negative rational numbers
  • Ratios, rates, and proportional reasoning
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.NS.A.1