Help your kids learn fractions! Even if they're not eager, teach them as they get older. Teachers will provide enough lessons and homework, but you can go a step further. Look at a worksheet with your kids and help them circle the piece that would make the pie whole.
Before starting, ask your child if they understand what halves and fourths are. If they can answer correctly, move on with the worksheet. Help them circle the right option beside each shape, showing if it's split into halves or fourths.
Explain to your students that they can make a new shape by combining halves, thirds, and fourths of a shape. Show them the worksheet with the rectangle at the top and ask them to find which sets of halves, thirds, and fourths make it. Have them check all the correct sets.
See how your child fares in matching two halves to form a complete rectangle. Provide them with four options, and ask them to draw a line connecting the two correct halves. Put their shape knowledge to the test with this simple worksheet!
Show your child how to divide a whole shape, like a square, into smaller pieces to become fractions. Point out when a shape is divided into two equal parts, it's called a half. Look at the worksheet together, and identify all rectangles that are cut in half (½).