Line Plots with Fractions
Line Plots with Fractional Data
A line plot is a graph that shows the frequency of data along a number line. In fifth grade, you will often see line plots where the data points are fractions, like 21â, 41â, or 81â.
Learning to read these plots helps you organize information and use fraction operations (addition and subtraction) to answer questions about the data.
Creating a Line Plot with Fractions
Imagine you measured the heights of 6 small plants in inches and got these results: 81â, 83â, 41â, 83â, 21â, 81â
Step 1: Find a common denominator. To place these on a number line easily, convert all fractions to have the same denominator. Here, 8 is the best choice:
- 41â=82â
- 21â=84â
Now your data set is: 81â, 83â, 82â, 83â, 84â, 81â.
Step 2: Draw the number line. Draw a number line starting at 0 and ending at 1, marking every eighth: 81â, 82â, 83â, etc.
Step 3: Plot the data. Place an "X" above the number line for each measurement:
- Two X's above 81â
- One X above 82â (which is 41â)
- Two X's above 83â
- One X above 84â (which is 21â)
Analyzing the Data
Once your line plot is created, you can use it to answer questions by adding or subtracting fractions.
Finding the Difference
"What is the difference between the longest and shortest measurements?"
- Identify the longest measurement (the furthest X to the right): 21â (or 84â).
- Identify the shortest measurement (the furthest X to the left): 81â.
- Subtract the shortest from the longest: 84ââ81â=83â inches
Finding the Total
"What is the total height of all the plants combined?" Add all the measurements together using your common denominator: 81â+81â+82â+83â+83â+84â=814â
Finally, simplify the improper fraction: 814â=186â=143â inches
By organizing fractional data on a line plot, comparing sizes and calculating totals becomes much easier!