|
You are using the online sample of the Teaching and Learning about Decimals CD-ROM. Not all linked pages are accessible in this version. For further information about the complete CD-ROM please click here.
Whole numbers are not enough!The whole numbers, also called the counting numbers, provide the means to specify "discrete" quantities, e.g. to say that 25 children are in the classroom. Children are separate entities; it does not make sense to talk about anything other than a whole number of children. For counting children and other discrete quantities, the whole numbers are all that is required. Not all uses of number are like this. Other quantities, such as children's height or an amount of cake are "continuous". The need to describe continuous quantities often occurs in commerce and everyday activities involving measurement where amounts of a basic measurement unit intermediate between two whole numbers need to be specified and communicated. The first way in which people solved this problem was to invent new smaller units. For example, the basic unit of time, the day, was divided into hours and then into minutes and then into seconds. Gradually people agreed that there would be 24 hours in a day and that the hours would be of equal length. The hour itself was divided into 60 minutes, which were again divided into 60 seconds. Today even smaller units of time are often needed, for example to describe the race times of runners and swimmers or to keep communications through computers synchronized. Measuring more and more precisely by creating smaller and smaller units has the advantage that only whole number arithmetic is needed. For example, problems about hours and minutes require only knowledge of whole numbers and the conversion 60 minutes = 1 hour. However, smaller and smaller units need to be invented and the conversions remembered. The metric system makes this easier, with all conversion factors based on ten. The second solution to the problem of describing measuring more precisely is by extending the number system itself to include both common fractions and decimal fractions (referred to in this resource as decimals).
Note that there are two units (the dollar and the cent) being used in the money example, but not in the area example. The area example shows that there is no need for the smaller unit (the tenth of a square metre) to have a name: the number system itself provides all the information required, because the whole number and fractional parts are not separate, but are together in the one number. There are mathematical advantages to extending the number system rather than creating smaller units. This is not shown with addition and subtraction but with multiplication and division. In the table below, the addition problem can be solved equally easily by thinking about dollars and cents as two (linked) different units or by thinking of the quantity as one decimal number. However, the multiplication is very hard to do in the first way, but easy in the second.
Fractions or Decimals?Fractions and decimals both serve the same purpose of describing parts of a whole. The idea of a fraction is more basic. Indeed the fraction concept of a tenth is required to understand decimals. For most uses, decimals have many advantages:
In other sections of this resource, it is shown that use of the decimal system is not easy to learn and there are many points which beginners find hard. However, good understanding is essential for dealing with measurements and with number.
When is a point a decimal point?A full stop is often used just as a general separator between numbers, and not as a decimal point separating ones from tenths and hundredths etc. This can be a source of potential confusion for children as they learn about decimals. By discussing examples with students as they arise in other contexts, teachers can alert them to notations which may cause confusion as they look similar to decimals. Confusing decimal points with general separators is also a source of error when children try to use calculators with time and other non-decimal contexts. Remember: The word "decimal" comes from the Latin word meaning ten. Examples: Time
Only in the third example above is the dot actually being used as decimal
point. The other examples are not decimal: for example the time after
1.59 is 2.00, whereas the two place decimal number after 1.59 is 1.60. Cricket, baseball and football
Documents
Library classification system The advantage is that new books can always be inserted into an appropriate place. (Although the ordering is the same as with decimals, the distance between numbers is not the same - for example,it is not meaningful to say that books in the 509 section are "as close" to books in the 510's as are books in the 511's. Their topics may be more or less similar.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
For information about this page, contact: Vicki Steinle
Contact Email Address: v.steinle@unimelb.edu.au
Faculty Homepage: http://www.edfac.unimelb.edu.au/sme/
Last modified: Sun 16 April 2006
This page, its contents and style, are the responsibility of the author and
do not represent the views, policies or opinions of The University of Melbourne.