Learn on PengiSaxon Math, Course 3Chapter 3: Number & Operations
Lesson 23: Multiplying and Dividing Mixed Numbers
In this Grade 8 Saxon Math Course 3 lesson, students learn how to multiply and divide mixed numbers by first converting them to improper fractions, then applying standard fraction multiplication or multiplying by the reciprocal when dividing. The lesson covers key steps including converting mixed numbers using the formula (whole number × denominator + numerator), canceling common factors before multiplying, and converting improper fractions back to mixed numbers. Real-world application problems, such as calculating the number of board rows needed to cover a wall, reinforce these skills in practical contexts.
Section 1
📘 Multiplying and Dividing Mixed Numbers
New Concept
To multiply or divide mixed numbers, we first write each mixed number as an improper fraction. Here is how we convert:
352=55×3+2=517
What’s next
Soon, we’ll walk through worked examples of both multiplication and division, and then apply this skill to solve a construction-based word problem.
Section 2
Converting Mixed Numbers
Property
To handle multiplication or division, first convert mixed numbers into improper fractions. To do this, multiply the whole number by the denominator, add the numerator, and place the result over the original denominator.
241=44×2+1=49
Examples
321=22×3+1=27
532=33×5+2=317
453=55×4+3=523
Explanation
Think of it as counting slices! A mixed number like 321 means three whole pizzas and one extra slice. To make it one big fraction, you need to count all the slices. The shortcut is to multiply the whole number by the bottom number (denominator) and then add the top number (numerator) to get your new total.
Section 3
Multiplying Mixed Numbers
Property
First, rewrite each mixed number as an improper fraction. Then, multiply the numerators to get the new numerator, and multiply the denominators to get the new denominator. Finally, simplify the resulting fraction if possible.
Examples
221×151→25×56=1030=3
331×121→310×23=31105×2131=15=5
Explanation
Multiplying mixed numbers is a two-step dance! First, you have to change your fancy mixed numbers into their simpler improper fraction outfits. Once they're dressed for the party, it's easy: top times top, and bottom times bottom. Then just simplify your answer so it looks sharp, maybe by changing it back into a mixed number.
Section 4
Dividing Mixed Numbers
Property
First, convert all mixed numbers to improper fractions. Then, instead of dividing, multiply the first fraction by the reciprocal (the flipped version) of the second fraction. Simplify the result.
Examples
421÷121→29÷23=29×32=618=3
331÷132→310÷35=3102×513=3×12×3=2
Explanation
Dividing mixed numbers has a cool secret: don't divide, multiply! First, turn your mixed numbers into improper fractions. Then, take the second fraction, flip it upside down (this is its reciprocal), and multiply instead. It’s the classic 'keep, change, flip' move that turns a tricky division problem into a much simpler multiplication one.
Book overview
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Section 1
📘 Multiplying and Dividing Mixed Numbers
New Concept
To multiply or divide mixed numbers, we first write each mixed number as an improper fraction. Here is how we convert:
352=55×3+2=517
What’s next
Soon, we’ll walk through worked examples of both multiplication and division, and then apply this skill to solve a construction-based word problem.
Section 2
Converting Mixed Numbers
Property
To handle multiplication or division, first convert mixed numbers into improper fractions. To do this, multiply the whole number by the denominator, add the numerator, and place the result over the original denominator.
241=44×2+1=49
Examples
321=22×3+1=27
532=33×5+2=317
453=55×4+3=523
Explanation
Think of it as counting slices! A mixed number like 321 means three whole pizzas and one extra slice. To make it one big fraction, you need to count all the slices. The shortcut is to multiply the whole number by the bottom number (denominator) and then add the top number (numerator) to get your new total.
Section 3
Multiplying Mixed Numbers
Property
First, rewrite each mixed number as an improper fraction. Then, multiply the numerators to get the new numerator, and multiply the denominators to get the new denominator. Finally, simplify the resulting fraction if possible.
Examples
221×151→25×56=1030=3
331×121→310×23=31105×2131=15=5
Explanation
Multiplying mixed numbers is a two-step dance! First, you have to change your fancy mixed numbers into their simpler improper fraction outfits. Once they're dressed for the party, it's easy: top times top, and bottom times bottom. Then just simplify your answer so it looks sharp, maybe by changing it back into a mixed number.
Section 4
Dividing Mixed Numbers
Property
First, convert all mixed numbers to improper fractions. Then, instead of dividing, multiply the first fraction by the reciprocal (the flipped version) of the second fraction. Simplify the result.
Examples
421÷121→29÷23=29×32=618=3
331÷132→310÷35=3102×513=3×12×3=2
Explanation
Dividing mixed numbers has a cool secret: don't divide, multiply! First, turn your mixed numbers into improper fractions. Then, take the second fraction, flip it upside down (this is its reciprocal), and multiply instead. It’s the classic 'keep, change, flip' move that turns a tricky division problem into a much simpler multiplication one.
Book overview
Jump across lessons in the current chapter without opening the full course modal.