Stage 4 · Ratios, Proportion & Percentages

4.6  Sharing by a Ratio, Unit Conversion, and Dimensions

Split a total fairly by counting parts, change units by multiplying by a clever "1," and learn to track the unit as carefully as the number.

For ages 10–12 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 1 of 5 in this lesson: 4.6.1 Sharing by a ratio: count the parts

4.6.1 Sharing by a ratio: count the parts

Suppose you and a friend earn a $50 bonus together, but you did more of the work, so you agree to split it in the ratio 3 : 2 — three shares for you, two for them. How much does each of you get? The wrong instinct is to grab "$3 and $2" or to fumble with fractions. The right instinct is wonderfully simple: a ratio tells you how many equal parts there are.

Read 3 : 2 as three parts and two parts. Add them: 3 + 2 = 5 equal parts in total. The whole $50 is those 5 parts, so one part is

one part  =  total ÷ (total parts)  =  $50 ÷ 5  =  $10.

Now just hand out parts. You get 3 parts: 3 × $10 = $30. Your friend gets 2 parts: 2 × $10 = $20. And the safety check that you should always do: the shares must add back to the total. $30 + $20 = $50. ✓

$10$10$10 $10$10 3 parts → $30 2 parts → $20 $30 + $20 = $50 ✓
The ratio 3 : 2 cuts the bar into 5 equal parts of $10 each. Three parts are amber, two are blue, and the shares add back to the total.
The three-step recipe for sharing

To split a total in the ratio a : b:
Add the parts: total parts = a + b.
Find one part: one part = total ÷ (total parts).
Hand them out: each share = (its part-count) × (one part).
Then check: the shares must add up to the total.

Worked example — a longer ribbon

Share a 72 cm ribbon between two bows in the ratio 5 : 3.
① Parts: 5 + 3 = 8.
② One part: 72 ÷ 8 = 9 cm.
③ Shares: 5 × 9 = 45 cm and 3 × 9 = 27 cm.
Check: 45 + 27 = 72 cm. ✓

A ratio is not a fraction of the whole — until you add the parts

In 3 : 2, your share is not 32 of the money. It is 35 of it — three out of the five total parts. Always turn a ratio into "out of the total parts" before you read it as a fraction of the whole.

🎮 Try itShare a total in any ratio

Set a total and a ratio a : b. The widget adds the parts, finds one part, and splits the bar into a amber + b blue pieces. The two shares always add back to the total — even when one part isn't a whole number.

Total
amount 50
a 3 : b 2
eastmath.com · 4.6 Sharing by a Ratio, Unit Conversion, and Dimensions · 4.6.1 Sharing by a ratio: count the parts