Transcript
INSTRUCTOR:
I'm going to look at the problem 2 divided by 2/3. What does this mean? One understanding of division is that the problem is asking, how many 2/3's are there in 2?
I can work this out by counting up in 2/3's and seeing where I get 2. So if I've got one 2/3 and then add on another 2/3 to that, I'd have 4/3. And if I add on another one, I'll get 6/3.
Now, 6/3 is 2. So the answer to the question 2 divided by 2/3 is 3.
This question was easily solved by counting up in 2/3's, but some questions are not so easy. Consider this question, 1 and 3/4 divided by 1/2, which we could say as, how many 1/2's are there in 1 and 3/4?
If I count up in 1/2's, I'd get 1/2, 1, 1 and 1/2, 2, and so forth. So I can see that 1 and 3/4 is in between 1 and 1/2 and 2. So I expect my answer to be a bit bigger than 3.
I'm going to look at this by drawing a diagram. I'm going to draw 1 and 3/4 circles. So that's one circle and then 3/4 circles.
OK. And I'm going to split those up into halves. So the whole circle will have 1/2 in it and another 1/2. And then this 3/4 circle will be 1/2 here, and then we've got a quarter of a circle here.
So I can see from this that I've got three halves, and I've also got the quarter. Now, that quarter is a quarter of a circle. But we're actually looking at 1/2's. So when we're looking at that, we're actually looking at a half of a half. This quarter is a half of a half.
So we've actually got one, two, three halves, 3/2, and then a half of a half. So 1 and 3/4 divided by 1/2 is 3 and 1/2.
I can also choose to do these calculations using the well-known method of turn it upside down and multiply. So it's a nice, quick, and easy way to do it. But you do have to remember the procedure and how it works.
And it's OK if only the procedure is done properly. And what a lot of learners do is think that it's both the numbers that have to be turned upside down, which obviously is the problem here.
So it's actually the second number which is turned upside down and multiplied. If we look at this one here, so 2 divided by 2/3 is the same as 2 multiplied by 3/2.
OK. So 2 lots of 3/2 is 6/2, which is 3. And in this case, 1 and 3/4 divided by 1/2 is the same as 1 and 3/4 times 2/1, 2/1 being 2. That basically means you're doubling it, so that's 3 and 1/2.
What you're doing when you turn it upside down and multiply is you are multiplying by the reciprocal of the second number. In other words, the number which is 1 divided by it. So 2/3 and 3/2, they actually are reciprocals. Because if you multiply them together, you would get 1.
And similarly here, 1/2 and 2/1 are reciprocals, because if you multiply them together, you get 1. So this is what's happening here. You're multiplying by the reciprocal, which is, as it were, equivalent to dividing by the original number.