Probing Questions: Ordering Fractions
Probing Questions

Ordering Fractions

Questions designed to stretch thinking, reveal misconceptions, and spark mathematical reasoning.

πŸ’¬

Convince Me That…

Students must construct a mathematical argument for why each statement is true.

1
Convince me that \( \frac{1}{3} \) is greater than \( \frac{1}{5} \)
πŸ’‘ Possible Argument

Imagine cutting two identical cakes. If you cut the first one into 3 pieces, and the second one into 5 pieces, which pieces are bigger? The more pieces you cut, the smaller each piece becomes. Therefore, \( \frac{1}{3} \) (a third of a cake) is larger than \( \frac{1}{5} \).

1/3 1/5

Mathematically, we can convert to a common denominator: \( \frac{1}{3} = \frac{5}{15} \) and \( \frac{1}{5} = \frac{3}{15} \). Since \( \frac{5}{15} > \frac{3}{15} \), we know \( \frac{1}{3} > \frac{1}{5} \).

2
Convince me that \( \frac{3}{7} \) is greater than \( \frac{3}{11} \)
πŸ’‘ Possible Argument

We don’t need a common denominator here! Both fractions have the same number of pieces (numerator = 3).

We know that sevenths are larger slices than elevenths (because the whole is shared among fewer people). Therefore, having 3 large slices (\( \frac{3}{7} \)) is more than having 3 small slices (\( \frac{3}{11} \)).

3
Convince me that \( \frac{3}{4} \) is greater than \( \frac{5}{8} \)
πŸ’‘ Possible Argument

To compare these, we need the pieces to be the same size. We can convert \( \frac{3}{4} \) into eighths by doubling both the numerator and denominator: \( \frac{3}{4} = \frac{6}{8} \).

Now the comparison is obvious: \( \frac{6}{8} \) is clearly greater than \( \frac{5}{8} \). Comparing numerators (3 vs 5) without checking denominators first is a common trap!

Check with decimals: \( \frac{3}{4} = \) 0.75 and \( \frac{5}{8} = \) 0.625.

4
Convince me that \( \frac{8}{9} \) is greater than \( \frac{6}{7} \), even though both fractions are “one part short of a whole”
πŸ’‘ Possible Argument

Both fractions are “one piece away from being whole.” But the missing pieces are different sizes. In \( \frac{8}{9} \), the missing piece is \( \frac{1}{9} \). In \( \frac{6}{7} \), the missing piece is \( \frac{1}{7} \).

Small Gap (1/9) Big Gap (1/7)

Since \( \frac{1}{9} \) is a smaller piece than \( \frac{1}{7} \), the fraction \( \frac{8}{9} \) is closer to 1 because it is missing less. Therefore \( \frac{8}{9} > \frac{6}{7} \).

Using common denominators: \( \frac{8}{9} = \frac{56}{63} \) and \( \frac{6}{7} = \frac{54}{63} \). Since \( \frac{56}{63} > \frac{54}{63} \), we confirm \( \frac{8}{9} > \frac{6}{7} \).

5
Convince me that \( \frac{5}{4} \) is greater than \( \frac{9}{10} \)
πŸ’‘ Possible Argument

We can use 1 as a benchmark. \( \frac{5}{4} \) is an improper fraction (numerator > denominator), meaning it is greater than 1. On the other hand, \( \frac{9}{10} \) is a proper fraction, meaning it is less than 1.

Since one is more than a whole and the other is less than a whole, \( \frac{5}{4} \) must be the larger number. This strategy is faster than finding a common denominator of 40!

🎯

Give an Example Of…

Think carefully — the fourth box is a trap! Give a non-example that looks right but isn’t.

1
Give an example of two different fractions that are equivalent
An example
Another example
One no-one else will think of
A sneaky non-example
πŸ’‘ Possible Answers

Example: \( \frac{1}{2} \) and \( \frac{2}{4} \)

Another: \( \frac{2}{3} \) and \( \frac{6}{9} \)

Creative: \( \frac{3}{7} \) and \( \frac{12}{28} \) — multiplying both numerator and denominator by 4. Or \( \frac{50}{100} \) and \( \frac{1}{2} \) — using a large denominator that simplifies dramatically.

Trap: \( \frac{1}{3} \) and \( \frac{2}{4} \) — a student might add 1 to both the numerator and denominator of \( \frac{1}{3} \) to get \( \frac{2}{4} \), thinking “I did the same thing to top and bottom.” But adding the same number doesn’t preserve the fraction’s value (only multiplying or dividing does).

2
Give an example of a fraction between \( \frac{1}{4} \) and \( \frac{1}{3} \)
An example
Another example
One no-one else will think of
A sneaky non-example
πŸ’‘ Possible Answers

Example: \( \frac{3}{10} = \) 0.3, which is between 0.25 and 0.333…

Another: \( \frac{2}{7} \approx \) 0.286

Creative: Convert both to a common denominator of 12: \( \frac{3}{12} \) and \( \frac{4}{12} \). Since there is no whole number between 3 and 4, we multiply by 2 to get \( \frac{6}{24} \) and \( \frac{8}{24} \). Now we can see \( \frac{7}{24} \) fits perfectly.

Trap: \( \frac{1}{5} \) — a student might reason that since 5 is “between” 4 and 3 (or bigger than both), \( \frac{1}{5} \) must be between them. But \( \frac{1}{5} = \) 0.2, which is less than \( \frac{1}{4} \). For unit fractions, a larger denominator means a smaller value.

3
Give an example of a pair of fractions where the one with the larger denominator is actually the larger number
An example
Another example
One no-one else will think of
A sneaky non-example
πŸ’‘ Possible Answers

Example: \( \frac{3}{4} \) and \( \frac{2}{3} \) — denominator 4 > 3, and \( \frac{3}{4} \) (0.75) > \( \frac{2}{3} \) (0.66…).

Another: \( \frac{5}{6} \) and \( \frac{1}{2} \) — denominator 6 > 2, and \( \frac{5}{6} \) > \( \frac{1}{2} \).

Creative: \( \frac{99}{100} \) and \( \frac{1}{2} \) — denominator 100 is vastly larger than 2, yet \( \frac{99}{100} = \) 0.99 is almost double \( \frac{1}{2} \). This proves that a larger denominator does not always equal a smaller fraction.

Trap: \( \frac{1}{4} \) and \( \frac{1}{3} \) — a student might offer this, thinking “4 is bigger than 3.” But here the fraction with the larger denominator is smaller. The condition only works when the numerator of the larger-denominator fraction is large enough to compensate.

4 ✦
Give an example of an improper fraction between 1 and 2
An example
Another example
One no-one else will think of
A sneaky non-example
πŸ’‘ Possible Answers

Example: \( \frac{3}{2} = \) 1.5

Another: \( \frac{5}{3} \approx \) 1.667

Creative: \( \frac{10}{9} \approx \) 1.111 — only just greater than 1. Or \( \frac{7}{4} \), which connects to the mixed number \( 1\frac{3}{4} \).

Trap: \( \frac{3}{3} \) — a student might think “\( \frac{3}{3} \) is improper because the top is not smaller than the bottom.” However, \( \frac{3}{3} = 1 \) exactly, so it is not between 1 and 2. To be between 1 and 2, the numerator must be larger than the denominator but less than double the denominator.

βš–οΈ

Always, Sometimes, Never

Is the statement always true, sometimes true, or never true? Students should justify their decision with examples.

1
If two fractions have the same denominator, the one with the larger numerator is the larger fraction
ALWAYS

When fractions share a denominator, the pieces are the same size — so more pieces simply means more. For example, \( \frac{5}{7} > \frac{3}{7} \) because five-sevenths is more than three-sevenths.

This principle is the foundation of the common-denominator comparison method. It always works because once denominators match, the only variable is how many equal-sized pieces you have.

2
A fraction with a larger denominator is a smaller fraction
SOMETIMES

True for unit fractions: \( \frac{1}{5} < \frac{1}{3} \). Dividing a whole into more pieces makes each piece smaller.

False when numerators differ significantly: \( \frac{3}{4} \) and \( \frac{2}{3} \). Here, 4 > 3, but \( \frac{3}{4} \) is larger than \( \frac{2}{3} \). The larger denominator (4) creates smaller pieces, but we have more of them (3 vs 2), and that compensates for the smaller size.

3
Simplifying a fraction changes its value
NEVER

Simplifying a fraction means dividing both numerator and denominator by the same number. This is equivalent to dividing by 1 (in the form \( \frac{n}{n} \)), so the value stays exactly the same.

Example: \( \frac{6}{8} \) simplified to \( \frac{3}{4} \). Both represent 0.75 or 75% of a whole. Some students confuse the numbers getting smaller with the value getting smaller, but simplifying changes the form, not the value.

4
If you add the same number to both the numerator and denominator of a fraction, the fraction stays the same
SOMETIMES

This is only true when the fraction already equals 1. For example, \( \frac{3}{3} = 1 \), and adding 2 gives \( \frac{5}{5} = 1 \) — the value is unchanged.

But for any other fraction, the value changes: \( \frac{1}{2} \) with 1 added to each gives \( \frac{2}{3} \), and \( \frac{1}{2} \neq \frac{2}{3} \).

Students often confuse this with multiplying both top and bottom by the same number, which does preserve equivalence (scaling). Adding changes the ratio.

πŸ”΄

Odd One Out

Which is the odd one out? Can you make a case for each one? There’s no single right answer!

1
Which is the odd one out?
\( \frac{2}{9} \)
\( \frac{1}{4} \)
\( \frac{3}{10} \)
0.2 0.3 2/9 1/4 3/10
πŸ’‘ A Case for Each
\( \frac{2}{9} \) is the odd one out — it is the only recurring decimal (0.222…). The others terminate.
\( \frac{1}{4} \) is the odd one out — it is the only unit fraction (numerator is 1).
\( \frac{3}{10} \) is the odd one out — it is the largest. \( \frac{2}{9} \approx 0.22 \), \( \frac{1}{4} = 0.25 \), and \( \frac{3}{10} = 0.3 \).
2
Which is the odd one out?
\( \frac{5}{6} \)
\( \frac{3}{4} \)
\( \frac{4}{5} \)
πŸ’‘ A Case for Each
\( \frac{5}{6} \) is the odd one out — it is the largest. All are “one part away from a whole,” but \( \frac{1}{6} \) is the smallest missing piece, so \( \frac{5}{6} \) is closest to 1.
\( \frac{3}{4} \) is the odd one out — it is the only one less than 0.8.
\( \frac{4}{5} \) is the odd one out — it is the only one you can convert to a decimal easily without division! Just double it to get \( \frac{8}{10} = 0.8 \).
3
Which is the odd one out?
\( \frac{4}{6} \)
\( \frac{6}{9} \)
\( \frac{3}{5} \)
πŸ’‘ A Case for Each
\( \frac{4}{6} \) is the odd one out — both numerator and denominator are even.
\( \frac{6}{9} \) is the odd one out — both numerator and denominator are multiples of 3.
\( \frac{3}{5} \) is the odd one out — it is the only one not equivalent to \( \frac{2}{3} \). Both \( \frac{4}{6} \) and \( \frac{6}{9} \) simplify to \( \frac{2}{3} \). This is a vital check before trying to order fractions!
πŸ”

Explain the Mistake

Each example contains a deliberate error targeting a common misconception. Can you find where and why the reasoning goes wrong?

1
Put \( \frac{1}{2} \), \( \frac{1}{6} \), and \( \frac{1}{4} \) in order from smallest to largest
A student writes:

Answer: \( \frac{1}{2} \), \( \frac{1}{4} \), \( \frac{1}{6} \)

Reasoning: “The denominators go 2, 4, 6 which is smallest to biggest. So the fractions go smallest to biggest in the same order.”

πŸ” The Mistake

The student has the order exactly backwards. They are applying the rule for whole numbers (“6 is bigger than 2”) to denominators. But for fractions, a bigger denominator means smaller pieces.

1/2 1/4 1/6

Because \( \frac{1}{6} \) is the smallest slice, the correct order is \( \frac{1}{6}, \frac{1}{4}, \frac{1}{2} \).

2
Which is larger, \( \frac{5}{9} \) or \( \frac{4}{7} \)?
A student writes:

Answer: \( \frac{4}{7} \) is larger βœ“

Reasoning: “I looked at the gap between the top and bottom numbers. \( \frac{5}{9} \) has a gap of 4 and \( \frac{4}{7} \) has a gap of 3. The smaller the gap, the closer it is to being a whole, so \( \frac{4}{7} \) is bigger.”

πŸ” The Mistake

The student got the right answer for the wrong reason (a “False Positive”). The “gap method” is unreliable because it ignores the size of the pieces.

Counter-example: Compare \( \frac{1}{2} \) (gap of 1) and \( \frac{9}{10} \) (gap of 1). The method says they should be equal, but \( \frac{9}{10} \) is clearly much larger!

The correct method is common denominators: \( \frac{5}{9} = \frac{35}{63} \) and \( \frac{4}{7} = \frac{36}{63} \), confirming \( \frac{4}{7} \) is larger.

3
Which is larger, \( \frac{2}{5} \) or \( \frac{3}{8} \)?
A student writes:

Answer: \( \frac{3}{8} \) is larger

Reasoning: “3 is bigger than 2, so \( \frac{3}{8} \) must be bigger than \( \frac{2}{5} \).”

πŸ” The Mistake

The student is only comparing numerators. This is like saying “I have 3 pennies and you have 2 fifty-pound notes, so I have more money.” You have more coins, but mine are worth more!

\( \frac{2}{5} \) has fewer pieces than \( \frac{3}{8} \), but the pieces are significantly larger.

Common denominator (40): \( \frac{2}{5} = \frac{16}{40} \) and \( \frac{3}{8} = \frac{15}{40} \). Since \( 16 > 15 \), \( \frac{2}{5} \) is the winner.

4
Put \( \frac{2}{3} \), \( \frac{4}{6} \), and \( \frac{5}{8} \) in order from smallest to largest
A student writes:

Answer: \( \frac{2}{3} \), \( \frac{4}{6} \), \( \frac{5}{8} \)

Reasoning: “\( \frac{2}{3} \) has the smallest numbers so it’s smallest. Then \( \frac{4}{6} \) because the numbers are medium. Then \( \frac{5}{8} \) has the biggest numbers so it’s biggest.”

πŸ” The Mistake

The student is treating fractions as separate whole numbers. Crucially, they missed that \( \frac{2}{3} \) and \( \frac{4}{6} \) are equivalent — they have the exact same value!

To compare \( \frac{2}{3} \) and \( \frac{5}{8} \), convert to 24ths: \( \frac{2}{3} = \frac{16}{24} \) and \( \frac{5}{8} = \frac{15}{24} \).

So \( \frac{5}{8} \) is actually the smallest.