Interpret the product (a/b) × q as a parts of a partition of q into b equal parts; equivalently, as the result of a sequence of operations a × q ÷ b.
Standard detail
CCSS.Math.Content.5.NF.B.4a
Component
Depth 3Parent ID: D270A624395246338200753501C0BF0EStandard set: Grade 5
Original statement
Quick facts
- Statement code
- CCSS.Math.Content.5.NF.B.4a
- List ID
- a.
- Standard ID
- 6B92A5720478456FAFF81454BA4CFDA2
- ASN identifier
- S1143683
- Subject
- Common Core Mathematics
- Grades
- 05
- Ancestor IDs
- D270A624395246338200753501C0BF0E366753EC60DE4400AC95657B754A9F34D1231310DFE401311CFB68A86D17958E
- Source document
- Common Core State Standards for Mathematics (2010)
- License
- CC BY 3.0 US
- Dataset notes
For example, use a visual fraction model to show (2/3) × 4 = 8/3, and create a story context for this equation. Do the same with (2/3) × (4/5) = 8/15. (In general, (a/b) × (c/d) = ac/bd.)