Math Antics - Dividing Fractions - Free Educational videos for Students in K-12 | Lumos Learning

Math Antics - Dividing Fractions - Free Educational videos for Students in k-12


Math Antics - Dividing Fractions - By mathantics



Transcript
00:03 Uh huh . Hi and welcome to Math Antics .
00:08 This video is all about dividing fractions , but in
00:11 order to understand how dividing fractions works , we first
00:14 need to learn about something called reciprocal . A reciprocal
00:18 is just a fancy math term for what you get
00:20 when you switch the top and bottom numbers of a
00:22 fraction . For example , if you have the fraction
00:25 1/2 and then switch the top and bottom numbers ,
00:28 you'll end up with 2/1 to over one is the
00:32 reciprocal of 1/2 and 1/2 is the reciprocal of 2/1
00:38 . And an interesting thing about reciprocal . Xyz multiplying
00:42 a fraction by its own . Reciprocal will always give
00:45 you one that's because you'll have the same multiplication problem
00:48 on the top and bottom . So you'll end up
00:51 with a whole fraction which is always one . Okay
00:54 , that's nice . But what do reciprocal is have
00:57 to do with dividing fractions ? Well , reciprocal let
01:00 us do a really cool trick . That makes dividing
01:02 fractions easy . Whenever you have to divide something by
01:05 a fraction , you can just multiply it by the
01:08 reciprocal of that fraction instead , and you'll get the
01:10 correct answer . And that's great news because multiplying fractions
01:14 is so simple . This trick of multiplying by the
01:18 reciprocal works because fractions are really just many division problems
01:22 . So when you multiply something by 1/2 , it's
01:25 the same as dividing by two , since two is
01:27 below the fractions division line and dividing by two is
01:31 the same as dividing by 2/1 . Because you can
01:34 turn any number into a fraction by just writing a
01:37 one as the bottom number , right ? But look
01:40 reciprocal , that's why multiplying by 1/2 is the same
01:44 as dividing by 2/1 . And it's true the other
01:47 way around too . So really it's kind of like
01:50 you never have to divide fractions , you can just
01:52 rewrite your division problems so that you're multiplying by the
01:55 reciprocal instead . Then when you multiply you'll get the
01:59 answer for the original division problem as always . Let's
02:03 see a couple examples of how this works . So
02:05 you'll really understand . Let's try this problem . 3/4
02:09 , divided by 2/7 . Okay , so the first
02:12 thing we wanna do is rewrite our problem instead of
02:15 dividing by 2/7 , we can multiply by the reciprocal
02:19 instead . The reciprocal of 2/7 is 7/2 . So
02:24 our problem becomes 3/4 times 7/2 . Oh , I
02:30 should mention a mistake that a lot of students make
02:32 when they first learned to divide fractions . Sometimes students
02:35 take the reciprocal of the first fraction , the one
02:38 that's being divided , or even the reciprocal of both
02:40 fractions , but you only want to take the reciprocal
02:43 of the second fraction , the one you're dividing by
02:47 . Okay , now that our problem has been changed
02:49 to multiplication , it's easy just multiply the tops three
02:53 times seven equals 21 multiply the bottoms four times two
02:57 equals eight . And we have the answer to our
02:59 fraction division problem . So 3/4 , divided by 2/7
03:04 is 21/8 . So that's pretty easy . But let's
03:08 try one more example , Let's try 15/16 , divided
03:12 by 9/22 . Again , the first thing we want
03:15 to do is rewrite our problem Will change the divided
03:18 by 9/22 into times 22/9 . Now , all we
03:23 have to do is multiply . But since these numbers
03:25 are kind of big , I'm gonna use my calculator
03:28 to help . Let's see here . So we have
03:31 all right on the top we have 15 times 22
03:35 equals 330 . And on the bottom we have 16
03:39 times nine equals 144 . So , the answer to
03:42 our division problem is 330 over 144 . Of course
03:47 . That could be simplified for your final answer on
03:49 a test . But we cover simplifying fractions in another
03:52 video . All right . That's how you divide fractions
03:55 . You just multiply by the reciprocal and you have
03:58 your answer . But there's one more thing I want
04:00 to show you . You already know that the line
04:02 between the top and bottom number of a fraction is
04:05 just another form of the division symbol . Well ,
04:08 that means you'll sometimes see fraction division problems written like
04:11 this . This shows the top fraction 2/3 being divided
04:15 by the bottom fraction 4/5 . It's really just that
04:18 we have a fraction made up from other fractions .
04:21 The top number is a fraction and the bottom number
04:24 is a fraction . It just looks a little confusing
04:26 because we have all these fraction lines here but we
04:29 can make it look a lot better . Let's rewrite
04:31 this as a multiplication problem by taking the reciprocal of
04:34 the bottom number , the fraction that we're dividing by
04:37 and multiplying it by the fraction on top there .
04:41 That looks easier to do . And it's really the
04:43 same problem . We just need to multiply to get
04:45 the answer . So two times five equals 10 and
04:49 three times four equals 12 . Okay , so there
04:52 you have it . What sounded really hard turns out
04:54 to be as easy as flipping fractions upside down .
04:57 If you can multiply fractions then you can divide fractions
05:00 too . Don't forget to practice what you've learned by
05:03 doing the exercises for this section . Thanks for watching
05:06 . And I'll see you next time . Mhm .
05:09 Learn more at math Antics dot com .
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