Abstract

ABSTRACTResearchers collaborated with a team of third-grade teachers in an urban district in the Upper Midwest to examine misunderstandings among students when using the number line as a model for fractions. Researchers looked closely at how the number line can be used as a model to build meaning for fractions for third-grade students. This article focuses on student interviews that discuss preconstructed and blank number line tasks that indicate how and when common misunderstandings occur when using a number line model. Misunderstandings include student misinterpretations of partitioning and tick marks, misunderstanding the unit, and equivalence as it relates to the number line. With these struggles as a basis, instructional implications for using the number line as a model in the classroom are provided. Reflection is included on the role of the number line and how it enhances third graders’ understanding of fractions in ways that other models do not.

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