In this lesson, learners will demonstrate an understanding of multiplication of fractions and whole numbers, as well as multiplication of two fractions, representing the process and results in visual (area models), contextual (word problems), and numerical formats.
Students will be able to:
Reference: NCERT Book Alignment
The lesson is aligned with the NCERT Grade 7 Mathematics Textbook, Chapter 8: Working with Fractions. Section 8.1: Multiplications of Fractions
By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
In this session, students explore how and why we multiply fractions. Using stories (Aaron walking; tortoise pace), visuals (unit square/area model), and rules (multiply numerators & denominators, cancellation), learners connect context → model → computation, then apply the ideas to real-life scenarios (cost/time, sharing, area).
| Title | Approximate Duration | Procedure | Reference Material |
|---|---|---|---|
| Engage | 5 | Hook (Think–Pair–Share): “Aaron walks 3 km in 1 hour. How far in 1/5 hour?” Collect quick estimates; surface strategies (repeated addition vs. fraction of a rate). | Slides |
| Explore | 10 | Hands-on Visuals: Use unit squares to model 1/2×1/4 and 3/4×2/5. Students shade rows/columns to see parts of a whole; discuss the grid has (denominator × denominator) parts. | Slides |
| Explain | 10 | Direct Instruction & Worked Examples: 1) Fraction × Whole via rate: 2/5×3=6/5 (Aaron, fractional hours). 2) Fraction × Fraction rule: a/b×c/d=ac/bd 3) Cancellation before multiplying: 12/7 × 5/24 = 1/7 × 5/2 = 5/14 4) When is the product bigger/smaller? (both >1; both between 0 and 1; mixed). | Slides and Virtual Lab |
| Evaluate | 10 | Ask students to complete a self-evaluation task on the LMS | Virtual Lab |
| Extend | 5 | Application & Reflection: Water tank example. | Slides |
In this lesson, students will learn how to multiply fractions and multiply a fraction by a whole number to find “parts of parts” and solve real-life problems. Through interactive examples, visual area models, and everyday scenarios (like distance = speed × time, sharing, and cost), students will explore why we multiply numerators and denominators and when the product is bigger or smaller than the factors.
Introduction: Why multiply fractions?
Hook: If Aaron walks 3 km in 1 hour, how far does he walk in 1/5 hour?
We often need a fraction of a quantity (e.g., part of an hour, a piece of land, a portion of a recipe). Multiplying fractions let us compute a fraction of a fraction or a fraction of a whole, such as:
Example scenario: Aaron’s tortoise walks 1/4 km per hour. In 1/2 hour, it covers 1/2 × 1/4 = 1/8 km. This shows “part of a part.”
What is the multiplication of fractions?
Multiplying fractions means taking a fraction of another fraction/whole. We multiply the numerators together and the denominators together:
Key components:
Case 1: Fraction × Whole Number (3 x 2/5)
Step 1: Rewrite the whole number as a fraction: 3=3/1
Step 2: Multiply numerators and denominators: 2/5 x 3/1 = 6/5
Step 3: Simplify and/or convert to a mixed number: 6/5= 1 1/5
Solved example (rate × time):
Aaron walks 3 km in 1 hour. In 2/5 hours, the distance =
2/5X 3 = 6/5 Km = 1 1/5 Km
Case 2: Fraction × Fraction (3/4 x 2/5)
Step 1: Multiply numerators: 3 × 2 = 6
Step 2: Multiply denominators: 4 X 5 = 20
Step 3: Write the product: 6 /20
Step 4: Simplify if possible: 6/20= 3/10
Case 3: Cancellation tip (before multiplying):
12/7 × 5/24 = 1/7 × 5/2 = 5/14
Case 4: When is the product bigger/smaller?
Visual Representation: Use a unit square (area model):
Applications / Why is it Useful?
This is the list of vocabulary terms used throughout the lesson.
In this virtual lab, students will explore the concept of multiplication of fractions using the PictoBlox 3D & XR environment. Fractions represent parts of a whole and multiplying them shows us “parts of parts.” Through interactive visuals, learners will see how numerators and denominators multiply step by step. Real-life contexts like walking distances, sharing food, and costs make the concept meaningful. The activity combines visual models, practice problems, and gamified quizzes for a complete learning experience.
Step-by-step Procedure for VR Experience
1) Access the Virtual Lab
Click Start to enter Scene 1.
2) Scene-by-Scene Flow
3) Quiz
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