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Chapter Analysis
Beginner8 pages • EnglishQuick Summary
The chapter 'Fair Share' focuses on teaching students about equal division and fairness in sharing. It explores the concepts of halves and quarters through practical examples and activities such as paper folding and dividing objects like mangoes and parathas. The chapter encourages students to think critically about what it means to share evenly, illustrating this with everyday scenarios. Students are guided to understand and use fractions in describing equal parts, emphasizing the foundation of division and fractions.
Key Topics
- •Understanding halves
- •Understanding quarters
- •Fractional distribution
- •Equitable sharing
- •Practical application of fractions
- •Paper folding methods
Learning Objectives
- ✓Understand the concept of halves and quarters.
- ✓Learn to divide objects into equal parts.
- ✓Apply the concept of fairness in sharing.
- ✓Develop an understanding of basic fractions.
- ✓Use paper folding to visualize fractions.
- ✓Emphasize critical thinking in fair distribution.
Questions in Chapter
1. Tick ✔ the objects that show quarters.
Page 113
2. Draw lines to make a quarter of the whole.
Page 113
3. Draw the remaining three quarters and complete the whole.
Page 113
4. Draw the remaining quarters to complete the whole.
Page 115
1. Tick ✔ the paratha that has been cut equally.
Page 108
2. Draw a line to show one-half of the whole.
Page 109
Additional Practice Questions
If you divide a pizza into four equal pieces, what fraction of the pizza is each piece?
easyAnswer: Each piece is one-quarter of the pizza.
If two friends share 10 apples equally, how many apples does each friend get?
easyAnswer: Each friend gets 5 apples.
Imagine you folded a piece of paper in half, then folded it in half again. What fraction of the paper do you have if you unfold just one part?
mediumAnswer: You would have one-quarter of the original paper.
A chocolate bar is broken into 8 equal pieces. If you eat 3 pieces, what fraction of the chocolate bar is left?
mediumAnswer: 5/8 of the chocolate bar is left.
How many quarters make up one half?
easyAnswer: Two quarters make up one half.