This hard-1 worksheet challenges kindergartners to compare unit fractions and reason about equal parts. Four multiple-choice questions ask which of 1/2, 1/3, or 1/4 is biggest and what each part of a four-piece circle is called. Five fill-in-the-blank problems push children to explain why 1/2 is larger than 1/4 and to count how many quarters fit in a ribbon cut into four equal pieces.
Style:
Fractions: Halves, Thirds & Quarters
Part A: Multiple Choice
Circle the correct answer for each question.
1. Which fraction is the biggest: 12, 13, or 14?
A) 13
B) 14
C) 12
D) They are all the same
2. A circle is cut into 4 equal parts. What is each part called?
A) A half
B) A third
C) A quarter
D) A whole
3. If you share a sandwich equally with 2 friends (3 people total), each person gets what fraction?
A) 12
B) 13
C) 14
D) 11
4. Which fraction is the smallest: 12, 13, or 14?
A) 12
B) 13
C) 14
D) They are all the same
Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1. A pizza is cut into 3 equal slices. You eat one slice. You ate 13 of the pizza.
2. 12 is bigger than 14 because 2 is less than 4.
3. If you cut a ribbon into 4 equal pieces, you have 4 quarters.
4. Three thirds make one whole.
5. Four quarters make one whole.
Fractions: Halves, Thirds & Quarters
★ Part A: Multiple Choice
Circle the correct answer for each question.
1. Which fraction is the biggest: 12, 13, or 14?
A) 13
B) 14
C) 12
D) They are all the same
2. A circle is cut into 4 equal parts. What is each part called?
A) A half
B) A third
C) A quarter
D) A whole
3. If you share a sandwich equally with 2 friends (3 people total), each person gets what fraction?
A) 12
B) 13
C) 14
D) 11
4. Which fraction is the smallest: 12, 13, or 14?
A) 12
B) 13
C) 14
D) They are all the same
★ Part B: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1) A pizza is cut into 3 equal slices. You eat one slice. You ate 1/3 of the pizza.
2) 1/2 is bigger than 1/4 because 2 is less than 4.
3) If you cut a ribbon into 4 equal pieces, you have 4 quarters.
4) Three thirds make one whole.
5) Four quarters make one whole.
Ready to Practice?
Circle the correct answer for each question, then fill in the blanks.
9 Questions
20-25 minutes
Auto-graded
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