Stage 5 · Negative & Rational Numbers

5.4  Adding and Subtracting Rational Numbers

Add and subtract by walking the number line — and one rule that turns subtraction into addition.

For ages 11–13 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 1 of 5 in this lesson: 5.4.1 The picture of addition

5.4.1 The picture of addition

To add two signed numbers, treat the first one as your starting spot and the second one as a step. The sign of the step tells you which way to face: a positive step walks you right, a negative step walks you left. The size of the step is just its absolute value — how many units to walk. Where your feet stop is the sum.

Take (+3) + (−5). Start at +3. The step is −5, so face left and walk 5 units. You pass through +2, +1, the origin 0, then −1, and stop at −2. So (+3) + (−5) = −2.

−6−4−2 0 246 +3 step −5 (5 left) land: −2
Start at +3, then step 5 units left because the second number is −5. You cross zero and stop at −2.

The picture also explains why the answer can flip sign. The first number got you a little way to the right; the second step was bigger and pointed left, so it carried you back past zero into negative territory. The further-reaching step wins the tug-of-war.

Key idea

Adding is a walk: start at the first number, then step the second number's distance — right if it is positive, left if it is negative. Where you land is the sum.

🎮 Try itWalk the addition on the line

Set the two addends. The first arrow walks from 0 to the first number; the second arrow steps from there. Watch where you land — that landing spot is the sum.

First number 3
Add -5
eastmath.com · 5.4 Adding and Subtracting Rational Numbers · 5.4.1 The picture of addition