Stage 5 · Negative & Rational Numbers

5.3  The Rational Number Family and Comparing Size

Gathering integers, fractions, and decimals into one family — and lining them up by size.

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

Point 3 of 5 in this lesson: 5.3.3 Comparing size on the number line

5.3.3 Comparing size on the number line

Once two numbers sit on the line, comparing them needs no arithmetic at all — just look. Here is the one rule that runs all of Stage 5:

The rule of the line

The farther right a number sits, the bigger it is. So a number on the right is greater than any number to its left, and a number on the left is less than any number to its right. The line is already sorted smallest-to-largest, left to right.

The two symbols that record this are < ("is less than") and > ("is greater than"). A handy memory trick: the small pinched point always aims at the smaller number, and the wide open mouth gapes at the bigger one. So −2 < 1 reads "−2 is less than 1," and that matches the picture — −2 is to the left.

−4 −3 −2 −1 0 1 2 3 4 −2 1 — bigger
1 sits to the right of −2, so 1 is the larger number: −2 < 1. The circle marks the winner — the one farther right.
🎮 Try itSlide two numbers and read off the sign

Move A and B along the tenths. Whichever sits farther right is bigger — watch the correct <, =, or > appear between them.

A (tenths) −1.5
B (tenths) 0.8
eastmath.com · 5.3 The Rational Number Family and Comparing Size · 5.3.3 Comparing size on the number line