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 4 of 5 in this lesson: 5.3.4 How positives, negatives, and zero rank

5.3.4 How positives, negatives, and zero rank

The "look at the line" rule has three consequences so reliable you can use them without drawing anything:

① Every positive number is greater than 0 — it lives to the right of the origin.
② Every negative number is less than 0 — it lives to the left.
③ So any positive beats any negative, no matter their sizes, because the whole positive side is to the right of the whole negative side — with 0 standing in the middle as the referee.

That is why a tiny positive crushes a giant negative: −100 < 0 < 0.01. The number 0.01 is barely a whisper above zero, yet it still beats −100, which sits a hundred steps to the left. Position on the line, not loudness of the digits, decides the winner.

0 NEGATIVE — all < 0 POSITIVE — all > 0 −100 0.01 −100 < 0 < 0.01 — the tiny positive still wins
Three zones, always in this order left to right: the entire negative side, then 0, then the entire positive side. Any point in the teal zone outranks any point in the red zone.
Key idea

Positive > 0 > negative — always. You never have to compare the actual sizes of a positive and a negative number; the signs alone decide it. Only when both numbers share a sign do you look closer — which is the next section.

eastmath.com · 5.3 The Rational Number Family and Comparing Size · 5.3.4 How positives, negatives, and zero rank