Grade: Grade 2 Subject: Mathematics Unit: Fractions: Halves & Thirds Lesson: 5 of 6 SAT: Advanced Math ACT: Math

Common Mistakes with Halves and Thirds

Learn

Everyone makes mistakes when learning something new! In this lesson, we will look at common mistakes students make with fractions. Learning about these mistakes will help you avoid them.

Why Learn About Mistakes?

When you know what mistakes to watch for, you can check your work and catch errors before they cause problems. Smart learners study mistakes!

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake #1: Forgetting That Parts Must Be Equal

Wrong:

"This shape is split into halves."

The parts are NOT the same size!

Right:

"This shape is split into halves."

Both parts ARE the same size!

Remember: For halves, BOTH parts must be equal. For thirds, ALL THREE parts must be equal.

Mistake #2: Thinking More Parts Means Bigger Pieces

Wrong:

"1/3 is bigger than 1/2 because 3 is bigger than 2."

Right:

"1/2 is bigger than 1/3 because cutting into fewer pieces makes each piece larger."

1/2

1/3

Remember: When you cut something into MORE pieces, each piece gets SMALLER. Half (2 pieces) is bigger than a third (3 pieces).

Mistake #3: Counting Parts Wrong

Wrong:

"I ate 1 piece out of 3, so I ate 1/2."

Right:

"I ate 1 piece out of 3, so I ate 1/3."

Remember: The bottom number tells how many TOTAL equal parts. The top number tells how many parts you have.

Mistake #4: Confusing "Half" and "Halves"

Wrong:

"I cut the apple into 1 half."

Right:

"I cut the apple into 2 halves." (Then each piece is 1 half.)

Remember: "Halves" means 2 equal pieces. "Half" means 1 of those pieces.

Mistake #5: Not Checking if Shapes Start the Same Size

Wrong:

"Half of a small cookie equals half of a big pizza."

Right:

"Half of a small cookie is much less than half of a big pizza because the whole things are different sizes."

Remember: Fractions compare parts to the WHOLE. 1/2 of a big thing is more than 1/2 of a small thing.

Practice

Find the mistake in each problem. Then explain what is wrong.

Problem 1

Mia says: "I cut my paper into 2 pieces, so I have halves." Is Mia always correct?

Show Answer

NOT always correct! Mia only has halves if the 2 pieces are EQUAL (the same size). If one piece is bigger than the other, they are not halves.

Problem 2

Jake says: "One third is bigger than one half because 3 is more than 2." What is Jake's mistake?

Show Answer

Jake has it backwards! When you divide something into MORE parts, each part is SMALLER. One half (1/2) is bigger than one third (1/3).

Problem 3

Sara divided a rectangle into 3 parts. One part is very small, and two parts are big. Can she say she has thirds?

Show Answer

No! For thirds, all 3 parts must be the SAME size (equal). Sara just has 3 unequal parts.

Problem 4

Tom ate 2/3 of a cookie. He says he ate most of the cookie. Is he right?

Show Answer

Yes! 2/3 is more than half. If you eat 2 out of 3 equal pieces, you ate more than half the cookie.

Problem 5

Emma says: "I want the bigger half!" What is funny about what Emma said?

Show Answer

There is no "bigger half"! If the pieces are truly halves, they are EQUAL - both the same size. If one is bigger, they are not real halves.

Problem 6

A circle is drawn. Leo draws one line through the middle. Does he have halves?

Show Answer

It depends! If the line goes through the CENTER of the circle, yes, he has halves. If the line is off-center, the pieces are not equal, so not halves.

Problem 7

Kim has half of a small pizza. Ben has half of a large pizza. Kim says they have the same amount. Is Kim correct?

Show Answer

No! Ben has more pizza because his whole pizza was larger. Half of a big pizza is more than half of a small pizza.

Problem 8

A student writes: "1 third + 1 third = 2 sixths." Find the mistake.

Show Answer

The mistake is in the answer. 1/3 + 1/3 = 2/3 (two thirds), not two sixths. The bottom number stays the same when adding fractions with the same bottom number.

Problem 9

Amy colored 1 out of 2 equal parts of a shape. She says she colored 1/3. What is wrong?

Show Answer

Amy colored 1/2, not 1/3. There are 2 equal parts, so the bottom number should be 2. She colored 1 of the 2 parts, so the fraction is 1/2.

Problem 10

Carlos says: "If I fold a paper twice, I get halves." Is this correct?

Show Answer

Not exactly! One fold can make halves (2 equal parts). If Carlos folds twice, he might get 4 equal parts (fourths or quarters), not halves. It depends on how he folds.

Check Your Understanding

Answer these questions to show you understand common mistakes.

1. What is the most important rule for halves and thirds?

Show Answer

The parts must be EQUAL (the same size).

2. Which is bigger: 1/2 or 1/3? Why?

Show Answer

1/2 is bigger because when you cut something into fewer pieces (2 instead of 3), each piece is larger.

3. If you and a friend share something equally, what fraction do you each get?

Show Answer

You each get 1/2 (one half).

Next Steps

  • Review any mistakes you have made in the past
  • Always check: Are the parts equal?
  • Take the Unit Quiz to test everything you learned!