Skip to content
Phlow Academy logo
Phlow Academy
Let learning flow

Fraction 3B

Overview

In this Phlow, learners are introduced to adding fractions with unlike denominators. They begin with the example ½ + ⅔ and are guided through the reasoning step-by-step:

  1. Find a common denominator: The system asks, “What is the number below the line that 2 and 3 divide into evenly?” Students identify 6 as the lowest common multiple.
  2. Convert each fraction: The Phlow shows how ½ becomes 3⁄6 and becomes 4⁄6, reinforcing that multiplying both numerator and denominator by the same number keeps the fraction’s value the same.
  3. Add the numerators: Finally, learners calculate 3 + 4 = 7, giving the total 7⁄6.

The process emphasises that denominators must match before adding and that only the numerators are combined. Clear colour coding — purple numerators, grey boxes, and green feedback — helps learners track each step visually.

By the end, students understand why fractions must have the same denominator before addition — a key conceptual bridge between multiplication, division, and proportional reasoning.

Fraction 3B
Step 1 / 6

Prerequisite Knowledge Required

  • Fraction 3A – Finding the Lowest Common Multiple.
  • Multiply 2B – Equivalent Fractions.
  • Divide 2A – Simple Division Facts.
  • Understanding that multiplying numerator and denominator by the same number creates an equivalent fraction.
  • Familiarity with multiples and finding common denominators.
  • Confidence adding fractions with the same denominator.
  • Awareness of improper fractions (numerator > denominator).

Main Category

Fractions / Operations with Fractions

Estimated Completion Time

Approx. 8–10 seconds per step (6 steps total). Total Time: 2–3 minutes.

Cognitive Load / Step Size

Moderate — the Phlow breaks a multi-step procedure (LCM → conversion → addition) into small, manageable actions. Each step builds logically on the previous one, supported by strong visuals and minimal text to reduce strain on working memory.

Language & Literacy Demand

Low to Moderate — repeated phrasing such as “What is the number below the line…” and “What over 6 equals…” builds mathematical language naturally. The vocabulary (below the line, divide evenly, add to) strengthens understanding through consistent use.

Clarity & Design

  • Large, clean fraction visuals for easy reading.
  • Consistent placement of purple highlights draws attention to active numerators.
  • Step-by-step transitions prevent overload and guide reasoning visually.
  • Yes/No format ensures focus on understanding rather than memorisation.

Curriculum Alignment

Irish Junior Cycle Mathematics:

  • Strand 1 – Number
  • Substrand – Fractions and Operations
  • Learning Outcomes:
    • Add fractions with different denominators by finding the lowest common multiple.
    • Convert between equivalent fractions to create common denominators.
    • Understand that denominators remain constant during addition.

Engagement & Motivation

High — students experience satisfaction as the fractions visually align step-by-step. Each correct input provides immediate feedback (✓ / ✗), building mastery through active interaction and success reinforcement.

Error Opportunities & Misconceptions

  • Adding denominators instead of keeping them the same.
  • Forgetting to convert both fractions to the same denominator.
  • Confusing Lowest Common Multiple with Highest Common Factor.
  • Treating ½ + ⅔ as ³⁄₅.

The Phlow prevents these by scaffolding denominator alignment before addition, ensuring conceptual understanding before procedural execution.

Transferability / Real-World Anchoring

High — adding fractions underpins reasoning in ratio, proportion, measurement, algebraic fractions, and everyday problem-solving (e.g., recipes, probabilities, distances). Mastery here supports flexible thinking across multiple domains.

Conceptual vs Procedural Balance

Balanced — learners apply a step-by-step procedure while understanding why each step matters. Conceptual understanding of common denominators is continually reinforced through visual alignment and verbal cues.

Learning Objectives Addressed

  • Identify and apply the lowest common denominator when adding fractions.
  • Convert fractions to equivalent forms with equal denominators.
  • Add numerators while keeping the denominator constant.
  • Explain why ½ + ⅔ = ⁷⁄₆.

What Your Score Says About You

  • Less than 5: You may be adding denominators or skipping the conversion step — review how to make fractions equivalent before adding.
  • 6–7: You understand the process but may need more practice finding the lowest common denominator.
  • 8–9: You’re confidently applying the correct steps — excellent progress!
  • 10 / 10: Outstanding! You can add fractions with different denominators — ready to simplify and work with mixed numbers next.