Undo a wrong fraction operation to recover the start
You were supposed to subtract from a number, but by mistake you added it instead, and the result was . Find the value you would get from the correct calculation.
Show solution
Understand
You were supposed to subtract 4/11 from a number, but accidentally added 4/11 and got 10/11. I must first recover the original number, then do the correct subtraction.
- The intended operation: number minus 4/11.
- The mistaken operation: number plus 4/11, which gave 10/11.
- All fractions have denominator 11.
- The original number.
- The result of the correct calculation (number minus 4/11).
- Same denominator 11 throughout, so adding/subtracting just works on numerators.
Plan
#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems
The end result of the wrong calculation is given, so work backwards: undo the mistaken addition to recover the original number, then perform the correct subtraction.
Execute
Review
Check: original 6/11 plus 4/11 really is 10/11 (matches the mistake), and 6/11 minus 4/11 is 2/11. The correct answer 2/11 is smaller than the wrong result 10/11, which makes sense since subtracting should give less than adding.
Use the shortcut (tool 5): the wrong result is too big by 2 × 4/11 = 8/11, so the correct answer = 10/11 - 8/11 = 2/11.
Standards · min grade 4
4.NF.B.3Understand a fraction with numerator greater than one as sum of unit fractions — Subtracting like-denominator elevenths to recover the number and compute the correct result.