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 5 of 5 in this lesson: 5.4.5 Mixed addition and subtraction

5.4.5 Mixed addition and subtraction

Real problems mix pluses and minuses in one long string. The reliable recipe is three steps: first rewrite every subtraction as adding the opposite, so the whole thing becomes a pure sum of signed terms; next keep each sign glued to the number right after it; then reorder freely to gather the positives together and the negatives together.

The "glue the sign to its number" idea is the safety rail. Once 7 − 10 + 4 − 2 is read as the four terms +7, −10, +4, −2, you can scoop them up in any order without ever losing track of who is positive and who is negative.

Worked example — a mixed string

Evaluate 7 − 10 + 4 − 2.
Rewrite as a sum: 7 + (−10) + 4 + (−2).
Group same signs: (7 + 4) + (−10 + −2) = 11 + (−12).
Finish with the different-sign rule: 12 − 11 = 1, and −12 has the larger absolute value, so the answer is −1.

7 − 10 + 4 − 2  =  +7 −10 +4 −2 positives +7 + 4 = +11 negatives −10 − 2 = −12 +11 + (−12)  =  −1
Sort the glued terms into a positive pile and a negative pile: +11 against −12. One different-sign step finishes it at −1.
Key idea

For a long string: rewrite every as + (the opposite), keep each sign glued to its number, then reorder to add all the positives, add all the negatives, and combine the two totals once.

🎮 Try itSort a string into two piles

Set the four terms. The widget glues each sign to its number, sums the positives and the negatives separately, then combines them with the different-sign rule.

t₁ 7
t₂ -10
t₃ 4
t₄ -2
eastmath.com · 5.4 Adding and Subtracting Rational Numbers · 5.4.5 Mixed addition and subtraction