No LCD Required! FRACTION secret that everyone should know!

How to add and subtract fractions without finding the LCD (lowest common denominator). Learn more math at TCMathAcademy.com/.
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Пікірлер: 129

  • @lisabruneau3801
    @lisabruneau380127 күн бұрын

    Wow never thought math could be made this difficult.

  • @marscience7819

    @marscience7819

    22 күн бұрын

    Agreed. This is just a waste of time. This doesn't need a "hack".

  • @mapleext
    @mapleext28 күн бұрын

    Wow, that took you forever!!!!!

  • @johnnyrosenberg9522
    @johnnyrosenberg9522Ай бұрын

    If the video really needs to be almost 17 minutes long, then it can't be a good shortcut.

  • @TheFreeascent

    @TheFreeascent

    28 күн бұрын

    It's a great shortcut. Spend the time now, save time later.

  • @reddblackjack

    @reddblackjack

    25 күн бұрын

    Yeah, he's just doing it slowly because not everyone picks math concepts up easily. I would like quick, shortcut packed videos from this guy though.

  • @Glenns_Concho_Ranch

    @Glenns_Concho_Ranch

    Күн бұрын

    milk milk milk

  • @russelllomando8460
    @russelllomando8460Ай бұрын

    got it 1/15 easy one. thanks for the fun.

  • @steve_weinrich
    @steve_weinrich27 күн бұрын

    One does not need the LCD to add or subtract fractions. Just multiply the two denominators. After the remaining operations one is left with a single fraction which may or may not be able to be simplified.

  • @reddblackjack

    @reddblackjack

    25 күн бұрын

    Agreed. I was taught that an LCD isn't necessary in the process but reducing the fraction at the end cleans it up. Sometimes finding the LCD is a waste of time because of the fact that you have to reduce or simplify the fraction anyways. I skip it. Bowties baby!

  • @brettnaysmith3949
    @brettnaysmith3949Ай бұрын

    Must be getting paid by the hour for this explanation

  • @maryseaman312
    @maryseaman312Ай бұрын

    I would have never understood the purpose of this kind of math until I met (and married) a carpenter who measured things in 1/32 of an inch! I had never considered of heard of such a thing, but he was a very good finish carpenter - - I could not argue with him. There is a lot in the math world I have never considered.

  • @juliafoster9433
    @juliafoster943328 күн бұрын

    This shortcut method should only be introduced (some may figure it out for themselves) after the common denominator method is taught so students understand why it works

  • @raystevens1458
    @raystevens1458Ай бұрын

    Old school math, so many changes have occurred since I have been in school but you can't change this! .

  • @juancarlosgutierrez460
    @juancarlosgutierrez460Ай бұрын

    Hi, what software do you use to make this video?

  • @dorenandsara
    @dorenandsaraАй бұрын

    That was a great short cut.

  • @RustyWalker
    @RustyWalkerАй бұрын

    If this isn't cross-multiplying I'm going to be very surprised.

  • @gavindeane3670

    @gavindeane3670

    Ай бұрын

    Indeed that's what it is. Although I'm not really sure how the process he talked about before he introduced the hack was different to the hack. He solved the initial question by multiplying the two denominators and adjusting the two numerators accordingly. Then he introduced a hack which works by multiplying the two denominators and adjusting the two numerators accordingly.

  • @MikeStallings2023

    @MikeStallings2023

    28 күн бұрын

    Listened to several minutes of preamble just to learn there was no trick.

  • @KAF128

    @KAF128

    28 күн бұрын

    ​​​​​​Indeed ... LOL! This is definitely not my understanding of what constitutes a hack, i.e. a clever way to solve a problem. It is, I understand, now the way it is taught in the U.K, e.g. it gives autistic students a consistent framework. I see 16 to 18 year old GCSE maths resit students who call it the butterfly method, but some of them mess up the method. I understand it is basically what I learned but I was taught fractions at age 8 or 9, in the early 70s where the Lowest Common Denominator often makes the numbers smaller and therefore easier to deal with, on a non calculator paper. This so-called 'hack' isn't a hack at all, since it often actually makes the numbers harder to work with (they are weak on their times tables) and often necessitates additional cancelling of bigger numbers at the end ... more alarm bells . . !! I try to encourage our students, rather than faffing around with 8 x 4 = 32, and the resultant bigger numbers, to see that both numbers are in the 8 times table, so use that. This has the additional advantage that one of the fractions does not need changing ! And both his later examples had IDENTICAL working to the traditional method.

  • @dannygjk

    @dannygjk

    27 күн бұрын

    Exactly.

  • 27 күн бұрын

    And blindly cross-multiplying could cause the mess he mentioned about finding LCD. Lets say we have this: 37/308 + 47/77 With cross-multiplying: (37*77)/(308*77) + (47*308)/(77*308) Not ugly even a little bit. With LCD: 37/308 + (4*47)/308 => (37+(4*47))/308 I would say this is much better.

  • @raya.pawley3563
    @raya.pawley356317 күн бұрын

    Thank you

  • @WXLM-MorganNicole619
    @WXLM-MorganNicole61926 күн бұрын

    Thanks for the hack

  • @theredkitechannel3194
    @theredkitechannel3194Ай бұрын

    Skip to the middle for the actual “hack”

  • @arubaguy2733

    @arubaguy2733

    28 күн бұрын

    I honestly didn't know there was any way besides this to do this. This is a "shortcut"? What is the "long way"?

  • @reddblackjack

    @reddblackjack

    25 күн бұрын

    The long way involves baking two pies and cutting them into fractions and comparing the difference! Lol 😂

  • @ItzSeannyy
    @ItzSeannyyАй бұрын

    Refreshing my math for my asvab

  • @MrMousley
    @MrMousleyАй бұрын

    No LCD required ? 2/5 - 1/3 = 6/15 - 5/15 = 1/15 What could be easier ? I'll watch your video to see.

  • @gopherspace8571
    @gopherspace8571Ай бұрын

    So great Mr J I got it from watching your videos Thank you so much You won't believe this: Tonight I was coming home and that serious math problem was was on my mind. Math in math math

  • @gopherspace8571

    @gopherspace8571

    Ай бұрын

    Out so I said what if I did this another number bigger. Started with 44 already knew when I saw that it worked.! Any number. That's how it is applyable I never knew that. To check your math do it one way then check it again if you don't have a calculator. 👍 It works for any number Do 44 do 45 do 46 then 11 You'll get it I'm sure Can never thank you enough 🙏👍💪👋🌎❤️

  • @volkerschmoll4731
    @volkerschmoll4731Ай бұрын

    Sehr interessant. 🌻

  • @drziggyabdelmalak1439
    @drziggyabdelmalak143926 күн бұрын

    Good stuff, but I wish you had shown how to do this with more complicated fractions [like the example you jotted down with a 3-figure denominator]!

  • @brotherofiam
    @brotherofiam27 күн бұрын

    Might point out that any number multiplied by 1 stays the same. 7/7 = 1 and 3/3 = 1 so each fraction is essentially being multiplied by 1 before the operation is done.

  • @cynthiabrown1438
    @cynthiabrown1438Ай бұрын

    The shortcut was not addressed until almost 10 minutes in; is there any room for improvement?

  • @ellentronicmistress4969
    @ellentronicmistress4969Ай бұрын

    'Kiss and smile' - been around for a long time

  • @mychaelsmith6874
    @mychaelsmith687428 күн бұрын

    When you reduce the fraction after adding them, you are essentially finding the LCD.

  • @dannygjk
    @dannygjk27 күн бұрын

    This is something you quickly notice on your own after learning how to add and subtract fractions. There are plenty of other 'secrets' you notice during your study of arithmetic.

  • @1Skeptik1
    @1Skeptik128 күн бұрын

    Convert to decimals: .4 (2/5) minus .333 (1/3) Yes?

  • @tqnism
    @tqnismАй бұрын

    You do not need LCD. You need just any CD. But if your CD is not LCD, you will not get reduced fraction as a result. On the other hand, using LCD does not guarantee reduced fraction either. Advanced problem to think: what to do if you need to add more than 2 fractions? 3? 4? How does that shortcut change?

  • @okaro6595
    @okaro659528 күн бұрын

    I though this was the normal way. With mixed fractions you handle te whole parts separately. 3 1/2 + 1 1/7 = 4 + 7/14 + 2/14 = 4 9/14.

  • @wandapease-gi8yo
    @wandapease-gi8yoАй бұрын

    Dry usegul! Do kids still memorize the multiplication tables?

  • @dannygjk

    @dannygjk

    27 күн бұрын

    If they want to be able multiply large numbers quickly yes they need to memorize the tables.

  • @redbeard5598
    @redbeard559817 күн бұрын

    Not really new. The bow-tie method IS the LCD method, just a little gussied-up for the consumption of the formula-bound.

  • @krunoslavregvar477
    @krunoslavregvar477Ай бұрын

    = 1/15

  • @b213videoz
    @b213videozАй бұрын

    0:33 "easy as PI" 😂😁🤣

  • @nancyholmquist2690
    @nancyholmquist269025 күн бұрын

    How does this make sense?

  • @edwinlandy
    @edwinlandy25 күн бұрын

    There may have been some LCD involved.

  • @tedbristol894
    @tedbristol89429 күн бұрын

    He did it the hard way,

  • @GoofballFlyer
    @GoofballFlyer27 күн бұрын

    What if you have 3, 4, or 5... fractions to add/subtract?

  • @brotherofiam

    @brotherofiam

    27 күн бұрын

    take 2 fractions use this method to find the answer, then use the results of the first 2 and add/subtract the next fraction. repeat this process until only 1 fraction remains, which would be the results of adding/subtracting all the fractions.

  • @GoofballFlyer

    @GoofballFlyer

    27 күн бұрын

    Right. I was actually wondering if there was some clever "shortcut" like this example was supposed to show.

  • @lamagra0152
    @lamagra015227 күн бұрын

    Alge-bare-ic at 1:46 derailed it for me.

  • @its-a-bountiful-life
    @its-a-bountiful-lifeАй бұрын

    I get 1/15, in my head, but forget the exact process of the cross-multiply process. That works for the numerator, then I just multipled straight across for the denominator. Now, I want to watch to refresh my memory. Thanks.

  • @PaulHarris-sl1ct
    @PaulHarris-sl1ct27 күн бұрын

    Easy as PI?

  • @dannyknight1348
    @dannyknight134829 күн бұрын

    0.70

  • @guerdachery3395
    @guerdachery3395Ай бұрын

    3/5

  • @redbeard5598
    @redbeard559817 күн бұрын

    1/15. In my head. About 9 seconds.

  • @dazartingstall6680
    @dazartingstall6680Ай бұрын

    6/15 − 5/15 = 1/15 However, in this case cross multiplying results in the LCD, so nothing much is gained. Try this: 5/12 − 7/18 90/216 − 84/216 6/216 1/36

  • @davidduncan1362

    @davidduncan1362

    Ай бұрын

    I know an easier way to solve 5/12 - 7/18. Try this: 5/12 - 7/18 (18×5+12×-7)/(12×18) I am going to leave the multiplication unsolved for now because if all three multiplication products have a common factor, we can start reducing right away. Be careful, though. There must be a common factor for ALL three of these products or else this method will not work. If we have (18×5+12×-7)/(18×12), we see that all three of these products can be divided by six, so we can replace eighteens with threes and that twelve with a two to make it look more like this: (3×5+2×-7)/(3×12). Now, we can start solving the multiplication: 3×5=15, 2×-7=-14, 3×12=36 and we come to this: (15-14)/36. The last step is first grade subtraction: 15-14=1 and after this, we get 1/36 and we are finished. This trick can enable you to solve bow tie multiplication with third grade times tables when dealing with fractions. Don't make your life complicated.

  • @jonnamechange6854

    @jonnamechange6854

    Ай бұрын

    @@davidduncan1362TLDR, and anyway you added instead of subtracting

  • @jonnamechange6854

    @jonnamechange6854

    Ай бұрын

    I find it best to look for commonality of how many prime factors are required in each denominator. In your example: 5/12 - 7/18 we break down each denominator to look at what prime factors each denominator comprises. So the denominator 12 needs two 2's, and a 3; where as 18 needs a single 2, and two 3's As a result the new common denominator needs the bare minimum of two 2's and two 3's 2*2*3*3 =36 So we divide each fractions' denominator into the discovered LCD. For 12 it's 3 times, so we multiply both numerator and denominator by 3 to get 5/12 = 15/36 For 18 it divides into the LCD twice, so 7/18 = 14/36 Just substitute your converted fractions back into your original equation So, 5/12 - 7/18 = 15/36 - 14/36 Which = 1/36

  • @dazartingstall6680

    @dazartingstall6680

    Ай бұрын

    @@jonnamechange6854 I agree in cases where factorisation is fairly easy, like these. I find cross-multiplication (what John calls the bow-tie method) more useful when the numbers are outside the range of easy mental arithmetic. Partly it's just personal taste of course: I'd rather simplify just one possibly quite hefty fraction at the end than spend time and effort checking the common factors of two earlier.

  • @gingasouls6504
    @gingasouls650425 күн бұрын

    Wait... The hack is to find Any Common Denominator instead of the Lowest Common Denominator? The method is the exact same for many fraction where the denominators multiple together IS the LCD. Good news is: I didnt miss any hack during elementary school.

  • @user-xp9zf4ji5l
    @user-xp9zf4ji5lАй бұрын

    Risposta : 1/15

  • @screambushbaby9085
    @screambushbaby9085Ай бұрын

    It’s hack time!!!!!! 😁

  • @PeerAdder
    @PeerAdder28 күн бұрын

    How to make a simple problem complicated. That isn't a "hack", it's the standard way of adding and subtracting fractions. You only need to worry about the LCD at the end, in order to present your answer in its simplest terms. So if the answer had been 3/15 you would simplify it to 1/5. Funny how you didn't go back and apply the method to the whacky fractions you chose to hammer home the obvious point that finding the LCD can be difficult.

  • @user-vd1cm6be4r
    @user-vd1cm6be4rАй бұрын

    1/2

  • @Mal1234567
    @Mal1234567Ай бұрын

    I solved this in 1/15 of a second in my head.

  • @maxinemcafee4893
    @maxinemcafee4893Ай бұрын

    I learned this in 4th grade.

  • @suewiersema8166
    @suewiersema8166Ай бұрын

    1/15 or one fifteenth

  • @kenfisher531
    @kenfisher531Ай бұрын

    1/15 -Ken

  • @DougLaubach
    @DougLaubachАй бұрын

    How would you use the bowtie method in your earlier example? 2/358+1/762

  • @cliffmerryman4164

    @cliffmerryman4164

    Ай бұрын

    I was also disappointed... My guess is to use a calculator since we can't factor/reduce denominator much. 2/358 = 1/179 but that doesn't help enough except to preempt final answer reduction

  • @dannygjk

    @dannygjk

    27 күн бұрын

    @@cliffmerryman4164 You should be able to double or halve numbers in your head. Naturally to be able to do it quickly and easily requires practice. When I show people how fast I can do multiplication by hand on paper people are amazed but it isn't because of any special ability it just comes from practice. I'm old school and back when I learned arithmetic in school we were drilled like machines until we could do it quickly and accurately.

  • @gregholloway6619
    @gregholloway6619Күн бұрын

    1/15

  • @retiredsenior3910
    @retiredsenior391018 күн бұрын

    Not sure, but old school would say 1/15.

  • @GerardPinzone
    @GerardPinzone28 күн бұрын

    Video starts at 8:11. You're welcome.

  • @benquinneyiii7941
    @benquinneyiii7941Ай бұрын

    Advanced

  • @EHenterprises
    @EHenterprises26 күн бұрын

    Negative. 13

  • @sr2291
    @sr2291Ай бұрын

    I just did it mentally 1/15

  • @drziggyabdelmalak1439

    @drziggyabdelmalak1439

    26 күн бұрын

    Yeh, so did I...but you can't do really complex ones mentally, can you? 37/89 - 41/39...?

  • @sr2291

    @sr2291

    26 күн бұрын

    @@drziggyabdelmalak1439 Probably with a paper and pencil unless you know a mental trick to solve it.

  • @johansteyn8526
    @johansteyn852629 күн бұрын

    Answer = 1/15.

  • @avishudlin3998
    @avishudlin3998Ай бұрын

    The answer is 1/15

  • @pawelpap9
    @pawelpap928 күн бұрын

    Isn’t it 1/15? I got this answer after 2s watching the video. I wonder what 16 minutes might he devoted to.

  • @LTV_inc
    @LTV_inc25 күн бұрын

    It took you 17 minutes to explain a ratio. If you were my math prof. I would have never became an engineer. 🤦‍♂️

  • @lwh7301
    @lwh7301Ай бұрын

    This is 5th grade math.

  • @dolphinride5157
    @dolphinride51578 күн бұрын

    So this video is 17 minutes long to explain something that could be explained in just 1 minute...

  • @BrianONEILL-qf2cs
    @BrianONEILL-qf2cs26 күн бұрын

    0.40-0.33 =0.07. That doesn't take 16 minutes.

  • @cliffmerryman4164
    @cliffmerryman4164Ай бұрын

    Disappointed. - Hoped to learn how this old hack could be used on more complex problems. - Hinted that the hack can be modified to work with large denominators then did not produce!

  • @LoriHoppman
    @LoriHoppman28 күн бұрын

    I like what you're doing, but you might get more subscribers if you're less wordy. People are busy these days. They don't like to give up more time than they have to. Great job otherwise! Thanks for the refresher!

  • @Astrobrant2
    @Astrobrant2Ай бұрын

    "Algebraic", not "algebaric".

  • @michaelthechimp7736
    @michaelthechimp773610 күн бұрын

    3 minutes in and i knew the answer in 5 seconds. Teachers teach for a reason?

  • @tedwalford7615
    @tedwalford761528 күн бұрын

    I see nothing new. The Fraction Secret STILL uses a common denominator, as one must, and it still gets the new numerators via the same and only way you can. And yes; you should still simplify if you can. - I guess the bowtie-method visuals are valuable for visual learners, but the math aspect is the same, as it must be.

  • @bienramos7587
    @bienramos758728 күн бұрын

    A simple problem it takes 17 minutes to solve.. 😂

  • @Eric-ve9pc
    @Eric-ve9pc12 күн бұрын

    math is difficult when a teacher drones on endlessly killing any spark of interest

  • @brucefisk9431
    @brucefisk94317 күн бұрын

    So stretched out I lost interest before getting to anything I didn’t already know

  • @rosssabah
    @rosssabah23 күн бұрын

    OMG... and he's a math teacher (note - with a Masters). Sad for all the kids he "teaches".

  • @slimdugger99
    @slimdugger9926 күн бұрын

    One fifteenth. Can’t type fractions on this keyboard.

  • @arubaguy2733

    @arubaguy2733

    25 күн бұрын

    Don't you have numbers and a forward slash? 1/15. Here's another: the asterisk (shift 8) means multiply.

  • @tbl-tj9oz
    @tbl-tj9oz28 күн бұрын

    You really give a very complicated explanation, it is very annoying. Actually there is a very simple solution.

  • @rickythomas6593
    @rickythomas6593Ай бұрын

    Poor sound quality

  • @BertFlanders
    @BertFlanders2 күн бұрын

    A video of 15 minutes ...

  • @markg7963
    @markg7963Ай бұрын

    Hopefully this guy isn’t teaching math somewhere. Took forever.

  • @icarus877
    @icarus87727 күн бұрын

    You make mathmatics very hard work and very boring, 17 minutes to explain this is very poor teaching. You are not explaining this concept from scratch to kids as is evident from your vocabulary. YOU ARE GIVING MATH A VERY BAD NAME.

  • @emilyhutjes
    @emilyhutjes22 күн бұрын

    please don't talk so long------ get to the point please.

  • @simonbowen1
    @simonbowen128 күн бұрын

    That was cataclysmically boring. And you claim to be a teacher?

  • @martincalero7390
    @martincalero739022 күн бұрын

    You talk way too much.

  • @tammmacdonald7723
    @tammmacdonald772327 күн бұрын

    You talk to much

  • @tanialelaj6327
    @tanialelaj632728 күн бұрын

    =1/15

  • @rgrinnell
    @rgrinnell23 күн бұрын

    1/15

  • @waynethomas3638
    @waynethomas363825 күн бұрын

    1/15

  • @mossesmadjemite2289
    @mossesmadjemite228927 күн бұрын

    1/15

  • @chrisrardin5043
    @chrisrardin504328 күн бұрын

    1/15

  • @BanksfMax
    @BanksfMax29 күн бұрын

    1/15

  • @stevencraven4897
    @stevencraven489728 күн бұрын

    1/15

  • @subasu478
    @subasu478Ай бұрын

    1/15

  • @drsierra1
    @drsierra1Ай бұрын

    1/15

  • @jimburt4473
    @jimburt4473Ай бұрын

    1/15

  • @janetgrant7571
    @janetgrant7571Ай бұрын

    1/15

  • @guerdachery3395
    @guerdachery3395Ай бұрын

    1/15

  • @farjanajahan3222
    @farjanajahan3222Ай бұрын

    1/15

  • @garyhalsey786
    @garyhalsey786Ай бұрын

    1/15

  • @chrisdissanayake6979
    @chrisdissanayake6979Ай бұрын

    1/15