Changing an Improper Fraction to a Mixed Number

Contributor: Erika Wargo. Lesson ID: 12537

What is an improper fraction? Is it one that doesn't have good manners? Hardly. It's just one that can be better understood as a mixed number. Learn how to convert them to make a better smoothie! Yum!

categories

Fractions and Operations

subject
Math
learning style
Visual
personality style
Beaver
Grade Level
Intermediate (3-5)
Lesson Type
Skill Sharpener

Lesson Plan - Get It!

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It is crucial to get all the ingredients exactly right when baking.

Watch the video below to see what could happen if you don't!

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Yikes! No one wants to fail at baking.

  • So what do you do if a cake recipe requires 83 cups of sugar?
  • Is there another way to write that fraction to make it easier to understand?

An improper fraction is a fraction with a numerator, or top number, greater than or equal to the denominator, or bottom number.

An improper fraction can be rewritten as a mixed number. A mixed number is a whole and proper fraction, such as 4½.

As you watch the video below to learn more, listen for the answers to these questions.

  • What is a proper fraction?
  • What is an improper fraction?
  • What are two ways to change an improper fraction into a mixed number?

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Follow these steps to write an improper fraction as a whole or mixed number.

  1. Divide the numerator by the denominator.
  1. Write down the whole number answer.
  1. If there is a remainder, write the remainder above the original denominator to create a new fraction.

Example 1

Write 54 as a mixed number. Draw a picture to show that the improper fraction and the mixed number are equal.

  1. Divide the numerator by the denominator.

  1. Write down the whole number answer. You can see in the example above the entire number is 1.
  1. Write the remainder above the original denominator. The remainder is 1, and the original denominator is 4.

The improper fraction 54 changes to 1¼ as a mixed number. Now, draw the picture.

  1. Begin by drawing two whole rectangles.
  1. The denominator of the fraction part of 54 and 1¼ is 4, so divide each rectangle into fourths.
  1. One whole figure is shaded, 44, and ¼ of the second figure is shaded.
  1. If you count each shaded square, there are 4 squares shaded in one figure and 1 square shaded in the other, so 44 + ¼ = 54. The improper fraction that represents this figure is 54.

Example 2

At the beginning of the lesson, you were asked the following questions.

  • So, what do you do if a cake recipe requires 83 cups of sugar?
  • Is there another way to write that fraction to make it easier to understand?

Follow these steps to answer the questions.

  1. Divide the numerator by the denominator.
  1. Write down the whole number answer.
  1. If there is a remainder, write the remainder above the original denominator to create a new fraction.

The improper fraction 83 is equal to 223.

In your own words, explain an improper fraction.

  • What three steps are followed to change an improper fraction to a mixed number?

In the Got It? section, practice changing improper fractions to mixed numbers.

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