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Reducing Fractions 5661 Views


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Description:

Once you're done reducing fractions, you can reuse and recycle them, too.

Language:
English Language
Common Core Standards:

Transcript

00:07

Reducing Fractions, a la Shmoop. You may not be aware of it, but we have a

00:12

serious fraction problem in this country. Every year, thousands of fractions are carelessly

00:18

discarded. They make their way into our food and water

00:21

supplies… … and pollute our air.

00:28

So please – do your part to reduce, reuse and recycle fractions.

00:33

Well… reduce them, anyway. Okay, so reducing fractions may not save the

00:38

environment, but it will make your life easier. But how do we reduce a fraction?

00:46

In this sense, “reduce” is simply another word for “simplify.”

00:52

Say we are given the fraction twenty-four thirty-sixths.

00:55

Hopefully we’re not following a recipe, because we might want to buy ourselves a new

01:01

cookbook. Basically, we want to find the “equivalent

01:04

fraction” with the smallest numbers, so it’s easier for us to wrap our head around

01:09

it. Equivalent fractions are fractions that are

01:11

exactly equal to one another. For example, three-fourths and six-eighths

01:15

are equivalent fractions. If we give you three-fourths of a dollar,

01:20

we’d be giving you seventy-five cents. If we give you six-eighths of a dollar, we’d

01:25

still be giving you seventy-five cents. Just don’t spend it all in one place

01:30

Well, back to our original fraction – twenty-four thirty-sixths.

01:36

If we divide both our numerator and denominator in half, we get twelve-eighteenths.

01:47

Because we are doing the same thing to the top and bottom, we wind up with an equivalent

01:53

fraction. Chop it in half again, and we get six-ninths.

01:59

We can no longer divide evenly by two, but we CAN divide by three…

02:17

Now that both our numerator and denominator are prime numbers, our reducing days are behind

02:24

us.

02:24

Looks like the most reduced version of our original fraction is two-thirds.

02:31

If you had realized from the beginning that the greatest common factor of 24 and 36 is

02:36

12…

02:37

…you could have saved yourself a couple of steps.

02:42

But you’ll get the hang of it the more you practice.

02:47

And we know you’ll practice plenty, because the world’s fractions are counting on you.

02:52

Give a hoot. Don’t pollute. Reduce a fraction today.

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