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Case:

Exam Problem given to student at university: Give a problem/context illustrating the operation $\frac{4}{5} + \frac{2}{3}$

Answer by student: Anna and Beatrice buy flowers for grandpa for his birthday. Anna buys $5$ flowers , $4$ of which are daffodils. Beatrice buys $3$ flowers, $2$ of which are daffodils. What fraction of the flowers are daffodils?

Remarks:

  • The student seems to confuse the operation $\frac{a}{b} + \frac{c}{d}$ with the some other operation I am not sure how to denote, but my attempt is: $(a,b) \star (c,d) = \frac{a+c}{b+d}$

  • The student seems to think that "4 out of 5" could be related to $\frac{4}{5}$. However, in this case there actually is a difference between "6 out of 8" and "3 out of 4".

  • I am not sure that I am asking the right question, but I observed this case in real life and I would like to analyze it.

Question:

What property of fractions or addition of fractions could they be misunderstanding, and how would you explain to the student where they have gone wrong so that they don't repeat this in the future?

Improve
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  • I never learned any music theory, but I noticed that 3/4 beat and 6/8 beat are considered different. Is that related? – Improve Apr 17 '21 at 15:32
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    (+1) Great question for those planning to teach at this level to ponder. Obviously $\frac{4}{5} + \frac{2}{3}$ is not the correct answer to the problem the student gave (e.g. clearly sum is greater than $1),$ and the student will surely see this when it's pointed out to the student, but a good teacher will want to come up with an explanation in which the error becomes intuitively clear without having to first express $\frac{4}{5} + \frac{2}{3}$ as a single fraction, or even without having to consider the value of $\frac{4}{5} + \frac{2}{3}.$ – Dave L Renfro Apr 17 '21 at 19:02
  • The other operation is called mediant, but I don't know if there is a standard symbol for it. – Massimo Ortolano Apr 18 '21 at 21:38

4 Answers4

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The student who designed this problem wasn't thinking about the different wholes.

IN your students problem, there are 3 different wholes.

  1. Anna's flowers - The whole is 5 flowers and $\frac{4}{5}$ are daffodils
  2. Beatrice's flowers The whole is 3 flowers and $\frac{2}{3}$ are daffodils
  3. The flowers of Anna and Beatrice combined. The whold is 8 flowers and $\frac{6}{8}$ are daffodils.

When we take a fraction we have to be aware of the whole. You can't compare fractions of different wholes. This is why $\frac{1}{2}$ of an apple is less than $\frac{1}{2}$ of a watermelon even though: $\frac{1}{2} = \frac{1}{2}$. Furthermore, you can't add the two halves ($\frac{1}{2}+\frac{1}{2}=1$) because they are halves of different things. If we have $\frac{1}{2}$ an apple and $\frac{1}{2}$ a watermelon, we do not have 1 whole fruit.

Your student has shown a lack of awareness of the importance of the whole, by adding the fractions that are fractions of different wholes and by not specifying the whole in the question.

What fraction of the flowers are daffodils?

To correctly give a context for adding two fractions the 2 fractions must be of the same whole. .

Amy B
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  • The whole is "5 flowers". 2) The whole is "3" flowers. 3) The whole is "8 flowers". I guess it takes some training or good understanding to realize that.
  • – Improve Apr 17 '21 at 21:51
  • @Improve I have edited my question to make the point clearer. – Amy B Apr 18 '21 at 05:21
  • @Improve As for training or good understanding - I would hope by university students would grasp this point. – Amy B Apr 18 '21 at 05:23