The Khan Academy has an excellent page on adding fractions with unlike denominators.
The practice set gives good feedback, and the video (below) seems effective.
Middle and High School … from a Montessori Point of View
The Khan Academy has an excellent page on adding fractions with unlike denominators.
The practice set gives good feedback, and the video (below) seems effective.
To add fractions with different denominators you just need to multiply each fraction to get the same denominator:
Take:
The easiest common denominator will be the product of both denominators ( 5 × 9 = 45 ). So multiply each fraction.
Notice that you’re really multiplying each fraction by 1 (since 9/9 = 1 and 5/5 = 1) and anything multiplied by one remains the same number. So you’re not changing the value of the fraction, just how it looks.
Now doing the multiplication gives:
Which we can add because we now have a common denominator:
And simplify to give a mixed number: