Addition of rational numbers exercises

https://arbital.com/p/addition_of_rational_numbers_exercises

by Patrick Stevens Jul 6 2016 updated Aug 1 2016

Test and cement your understanding of how we add rational numbers!


[summary: This page consists of exercises designed to help you get to grips with the addition of rational numbers.]

This page consists of exercises designed to help you get to grips with the addition of rational numbers.

Core exercises

First exercise: 110+15

%%hidden(Show some possible solutions): Using the instant rule from the text (which is actually a bit unwieldy here): 110+15=1×5+10×110×5=5+1050=1550 Notice that this can actually be made simpler: it is the same thing as 310, because when we take 310 and split each 110-block into five equal pieces, we obtain 15 copies of the 150-block.

Alternatively, one could spot that 110-blocks actually can already be used to make 15-blocks: 15=210. Therefore we're actually trying to find 110+210, which is easy: it's 310. %%

Second exercise: 115+110

%%hidden(Show some possible solutions): Using the instant rule from the text: 110+115=1×15+10×110×15=25150=16

Were you expecting a big denominator, or at least a multiple of 5? From this example, we can see that the final answer of a rational addition problem can have a denominator which doesn't even seem related to the others.

Alternatively, one could spot that 130-blocks will make up 110- and 115-blocks. Then we are actually trying to find 330+230=530; it's a bit easier to see that 530=16 than it is to see that 25150=16. %%

Third exercise: 110+115

You might find this exercise a little familiar…

%%hidden(Show possible solution): Using the instant rule from the text: 115+110=1×10+15×115×10=25150=16

You may notice that we've basically done the same calculations as in the second exercise. In fact, addition doesn't care which way round the numbers go: 110+115=115+110, even if we don't already know that that number is 16.

This is intuitive from the fact that addition is the idea of "place the apples next to each other and count up the total": just putting the apples down in a different order doesn't change the total amount of apple. %%

Fourth exercise: 05+25

%%hidden(Show possible solution): Notice that both the denominators are the same (namely 5), so we can just combine the 15-sized pieces straight away. We have 0 pieces and 2 pieces, so the total is 2 pieces.

That is, the answer is 25. %%

Fifth exercise: 07+25

%%hidden(Show possible solution): If you spot that this is "no 17-pieces" next to "two 15-pieces", then you might just immediately write down that the answer is 25 because there aren't any 17-pieces to change the answer; and you'd be correct.

To use the instant rule from the text: 07+25=0×5+2×75×7=0+1435=1435

But that is the same as 25 (simply expressed with each 15-piece subdivided further into sevenths). %%

Extension exercises

These exercises are meant to be harder and to stretch your conceptual understanding. Give them a proper go, but don't worry too much if you don't get the same answers as me. Mine are, in a technical sense, "right", but no matter what you end up with, you will derive a lot of benefit from trying to work out what the answers are yourself without having been told exactly how. The learning of mathematics is much more about thinking and understanding (usually guided by examples) than it is about just repeatedly carrying out calculations.

First extension exercise: 15+110

Yes, it is possible to add a negative number of chunks. Try using the instant rule and see what happens.

%%hidden(Show possible solution): Using the instant rule from the text: 115+110=1×10+15×(1)15×10=1015150=5150=130

What has happened here? What have we "really done" with our chunks of apple? Have a think; we'll see a lot more of this when we get to subtraction. %%

Second extension exercise: what rational number must we add to 78 to obtain 138?

You're looking for an answer that looks like ab where there are integers in place of a and b.

%%hidden(Show some possible solutions):

Something you can do to make this question easier is to notice that both the numbers have the same chunk-size (namely 18), so we might try adding some number of 18-chunks. Then we're trying to get from 7 chunks to 13 chunks, so we need to add 6 chunks.

That is, the final number is 68 (which is also 34). %%

Third extension exercise: what rational number must we add to 78 to obtain 137?

You're looking for an answer that looks like ab where there are integers in place of a and b.

%%hidden(Show some possible solutions):

Now, the numbers are no longer of the same chunk-size, so we should make it so that they are of the same size.

The chunk-size to use is 18×7=156. The reason for this is the same as the reasoning we saw when working out how to add 18 and 17.

Then the two numbers are 7×77×8=4956 and 8×138×7=10456, so the answer is that we need to get from 49 to 104; to do that, we need to add 55 chunks of size 156, so the answer is 5556. %%