Why this matters for FAST: Dividing fractions is a critical Grade 6 skill tested extensively on FAST. Students must understand that dividing by a fraction is the same as multiplying by its reciprocal, and be able to apply this to word problems.
Why this matters for FAST: Dividing fractions is a critical Grade 6 skill tested extensively on FAST. Students must understand that dividing by a fraction is the same as multiplying by its reciprocal, and be able to apply this to word problems.
Students flip the first fraction instead of the second: 2/3 / 4/5 becomes 3/2 x 4/5 (WRONG!)
"KEEP the first fraction exactly the same. Only FLIP the second fraction (the divisor). The first fraction stays put - it's the one being divided!"
Students flip the second fraction but keep the division sign, getting the wrong answer.
"All three steps happen together: KEEP the first, CHANGE division to multiplication, FLIP the second. Remember: when you flip a fraction, you're finding its reciprocal, and dividing is the same as multiplying by the reciprocal!"
Students try to use KCF on mixed numbers without converting to improper fractions first.
"Before using Keep-Change-Flip, always convert any mixed numbers to improper fractions first. 2 1/2 becomes 5/2, then you can divide!"
Review: "What is 2/3 x 4/5?" (8/15) "Great! Today we're going to learn how dividing fractions is really just multiplying in disguise!"
"A reciprocal is what you get when you flip a fraction upside down. The reciprocal of 2/3 is 3/2. The reciprocal of 5 (or 5/1) is 1/5. When you multiply a number by its reciprocal, you always get 1!"
Example: 2/3 / 4/5 = ?
23 / 45
KEEP: 2/3 stays the same
CHANGE: / becomes x
FLIP: 4/5 becomes 5/4
23 x 54 = 1012 = 56
Example: 1 1/2 / 3/4 = ?
Step 1: Convert 1 1/2 to improper: 3/2
32 / 34
Step 2: Keep-Change-Flip:
32 x 43 = 126 = 2
"You have 3/4 of a pizza and want to divide it into servings of 1/8 pizza each. How many servings can you make?"
Set up: 3/4 / 1/8 = 3/4 x 8/1 = 24/4 = 6 servings
Key insight: Division answers "how many groups of [divisor] fit into [dividend]?"
"What is 3/5 / 2/3?"
A) 6/15 B) 2/5 C) 9/10 D) 10/9
Correct answer: C) 9/10
Work: 3/5 / 2/3 = 3/5 x 3/2 = 9/10
For struggling students: Use visual models showing how many times a smaller fraction fits into a larger one. Start with unit fractions (1/2 / 1/4 = 2, because two 1/4s fit in 1/2).
For advanced students: Challenge with multi-step problems or problems involving three fractions. Introduce division of decimals by fractions.
For home: Send Parent Activity sheet. Families can practice with cooking (dividing 3/4 cup into 1/8 cup servings).