When we divide by a whole number, such as 12\div4, we ask the question, "how many groups of 4 fit into 12?". It's just like thinking about, "what number fills in the blank: 4\cdot⬚=12".
In this case, there are 3 whole groups of 4 in 12, so the result is 3.
We can think about dividing by a fraction in a similar way. The division 2\div\dfrac{1}{3} is equivalent to asking the question, "how many parts of size \dfrac{1}{3} fit into 2 wholes?"
If we split two wholes up into thirds, we can see that there are 3 thirds in each whole, and so there are 2\cdot3=6 thirds in total.
From this we can see that 2\div\dfrac{1}{3}=2\cdot3=6
When dividing by a fraction, we can rewrite it as multiplication by the reciprocal. This also works for fractions that do not have a numerator of 1.
Consider 6\div\dfrac{2}{3}. We cannot ask, "What is 6 divided into \dfrac{2}{3} groups of the same size" because that does not make sense. Instead, we can say, "How many groups of \dfrac{2}{3} are in 6?"
Again, instead of dividing by a fraction, we can multiply by the reciprocal of the fraction: 6\div\dfrac{2}{3}=6\cdot\dfrac{3}{2}=9
Use the dropdown boxes to create a division expression.
Press the 'Start animation' button to see a model of the division.
Continue pressing 'Show next step' until the animation is complete.
Observe the animation for several different division expressions then answer the following questions:
When a whole number is divided by a fraction between 0 and 1, the result is larger than the original whole number.
The number line below shows 4 wholes split into \dfrac{1}{3} sized parts.
Use the model to evaluate 4\div \dfrac{1}{3}.
If 4 is divided into parts that are \dfrac{1}{3} of a whole each, how many parts are there in total?
Rewrite 9\div \dfrac{3}{7} using multiplication.
Dividing a whole number by a fraction is the same as multiplying the whole number by the reciprocal of that fraction.
When we divided a whole number by a fraction, such as 2\div \dfrac{1}{3}, we asked the question "how many parts of size \dfrac{1}{3} fit into 2 wholes?"
Dividing a fraction by a whole number is the reverse of this. Let's look at \dfrac{1}{3}\div 2 as an example:
We know that 2 \div \dfrac{1}{3} = 2\cdot \dfrac{3}{1} and using a model we saw that \dfrac{1}{3} \div 2= \dfrac{1}{6}. Try to come up with a method that can be used to divide fractions by whole numbers and test it on the following examples:
\text{a. } \dfrac{1}{2}\div 4 |
\text{b. }\dfrac{3}{4} \div 3 |
\text{c. }\dfrac{5}{7}\div 5 |
\text{d. }\dfrac{8}{9} \div 2 |
We can think about dividng by a whole number using multiplication, in a similar way to dividing by a fraction, but creating the reciprocal for a whole number looks a bit different. First, we have to remember that every whole number has a denominator of 1:
\begin{aligned} \dfrac13\div2&=\dfrac13\div\dfrac21=\dfrac13 \cdot\dfrac{1}{2}\\ &=\dfrac16 \end{aligned}
Let's use the image below to help us find the value of \dfrac{1}{3}\div 4. This number line shows the number 1 split into 3 parts of size \dfrac{1}{3}.
Which image shows that each third has been divided into 4 parts?
What is the size of the part created when \dfrac{1}{3} is divided by 4?
Evaluate the following:
\dfrac 43 \div 5
1 \dfrac{1}{3} \div 4
Dividing a fraction by a whole number is the same as multiplying the fraction by the reciprocal of the whole number.
The reciprocal of a whole number is: \dfrac{1}{\text{Whole Number}}