Which pictures show one half of the shape shaded? Explain.
In picture (ii), the shaded area is equal to each of the two unshaded pieces and so the unshaded area is larger than the shaded area (twice as large). So the shaded area represents less than one half.
In picture (iv), the shaded part of the rectangle is larger than the unshaded part and so the shaded area is more than one half of the area of the rectangle. Unlike picture (ii) which represents one third, however, the lower picture does not provide enough information to conclude precisely what fraction of the rectangle is shaded.
Commentary
The purpose of this task is for students to see different ways of partitioning a figure into two or more equal shares, by which we mean decomposing the figure into "pieces" with equal area. In third grade, students should be able to reason in general about the relative size of unit fractions based on the idea that they are created by partitioning a whole into a certain number of equal shares; in second grade they begin to build this understanding by working with geometric figures that represent the unit fractions \(\frac12, \frac13,\) and \(\frac14\).
For picture (i), students will intuitively see that the circle is composed of two pieces with equal area and that one half of the circle is shaded. From here, it is not a very big stretch for students to see that the circle in (ii) is composed of three pieces with equal area and that one of these is shaded and that this is less than one half.
It is less intuitive for students to think of the shaded region in picture (iii) as representing one half. This is in part due to the fact that the pieces are less symmetrical, and the transformation needed to show they are the same size and same shape is harder to visualize for some students. Students struggling with this would benefit from having some tracing paper that would allow them to physically demonstrate that one can be rotated to exactly match up with the other.
For picture (iv), students need to compare areas of different shapes and decide whether the shaded area is more or less than one half. If some students suggest that one half of this picture is shaded, the teacher may need to remind student that the shaded and unshaded regions must have equal area.