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 3 of 5 in this lesson: 4.6.3 Ratios inside unit conversion

4.6.3 Ratios inside unit conversion

Here is a secret that makes every unit conversion easy: a conversion fact is a ratio equal to 1. We know 1 m = 100 cm — they are the very same length. So if you divide one by the other, you must get 1:

100 cm1 m = 1   and   1 m100 cm = 1.

Both of those fractions are conversion factors, and both equal 1. Multiplying any quantity by 1 never changes its value — only how it looks. The trick is to pick the version of "1" that puts the old unit on the bottom, so it cancels, leaving the new unit standing.

Turn 2.5 m into centimeters. The old unit is m, so choose the factor with m on the bottom:

2.5 m  ×  100 cm1 m  =  2.5 × 100 cm  =  250 cm.

The m on top cancels the m on the bottom, exactly like cancelling a common factor in a fraction, and the answer comes out in cm. Going the other way, to shrink the number you divide. Turn 3000 g into kilograms, where 1 kg = 1000 g:

3000 g  ×  1 kg1000 g  =  30001000 kg  =  3 kg.

100 cm 1 m 2.5 m × 100 cm 1 m = 250 cm old unit m cancels; cm is left standing.
The conversion factor 100 cm1 m is a "1" arranged so the old m cancels — leaving the result in cm.
Conversion = multiply by a clever "1"

A conversion factor like 100 cm1 m equals 1, so it changes the units without changing the amount. Always write the factor with the old unit on the bottom so it cancels and the new unit survives.

Which way does the number move?

Going to a smaller unit (m → cm), the number gets bigger (you need more of the small unit). Going to a bigger unit (g → kg), the number gets smaller. If your answer drifts the wrong way, you flipped the factor — turn it over and try again.

🎮 Try itConvert by cancelling the old unit

Pick a conversion and a value. The widget builds the correct factor (old unit on the bottom), cancels it, and shows the underlying 1 : factor ratio.

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Value 2.5
eastmath.com · 4.6 Sharing by a Ratio, Unit Conversion, and Dimensions · 4.6.3 Ratios inside unit conversion