Class 6 Fractions Explained Visually (NCERT Chapter 7)

Class 6 fractions in NCERT Chapter 7 cover five core ideas: what a fraction means, types of fractions, equivalent fractions, comparing fractions, and adding or subtracting fractions with the same denominator. The most common stumbling block isn’t the arithmetic. It’s that children don’t connect the fraction symbol to a visual meaning. Once that visual link is built, the rest falls into place.

What NCERT Chapter 7 actually covers

The chapter moves through these ideas in order.

  • Fraction as part of a whole. A fraction stands for equal parts of something. 3/5 means a thing was split into 5 equal parts, and we’re talking about 3 of them. The word “equal” matters - 3 out of 5 unequal parts is not 3/5.
  • Fraction on a number line. This is where many children first lose their footing. Placing 1/3 on a number line means understanding that the space between 0 and 1 is divided into three equal segments. Children often confuse this with placing it at “1” or “3.”
  • Types of fractions. Proper (numerator smaller than denominator, like 2/5), improper (numerator equal to or bigger, like 7/4), and mixed numbers. The key insight: improper fractions and mixed numbers represent the same quantity, just written differently.
  • Equivalent fractions. 1/2 = 2/4 = 3/6 = 4/8. The value doesn’t change when you multiply or divide both numerator and denominator by the same number. This is the foundation for everything that follows.
  • Comparing fractions. Same denominator: compare numerators directly. Same numerator: smaller denominator means bigger fraction (1/3 > 1/5). Different both: find equivalent fractions with a common denominator, then compare.
  • Addition and subtraction with the same denominator. 2/7 + 3/7 = 5/7. The denominator stays the same because you’re adding pieces of the same size. Children who don’t grasp why will later add denominators too - writing 2/7 + 3/7 = 5/14, a very common error in Class 7.

Why visual methods matter here

Every one of these ideas becomes clearer with a picture.

  • For fraction as part of a whole - draw a rectangle, divide into equal parts, shade some.
  • For the number line - mark 0 and 1, divide the gap equally, point to the fraction.
  • For equivalent fractions - show that 1/2 of a pizza and 2/4 of the same pizza cover the same area.
  • For comparing - put two fraction bars side by side, and your child can see which is longer.
  • For addition - shade 2/7 in one colour and 3/7 in another on the same bar; the total shaded is 5/7.
Children who learn fractions only through numbers and rules end up with a fragile understanding. Children who learn visually first, then connect the visuals to the numbers, build understanding that survives harder problems later.

The four most common Class 6 fraction mistakes

Bigger denominator means bigger fraction. Children assume 1/8 > 1/3 because 8 > 3. The visual fix: draw two identical pizzas, cut one into 3 slices and one into 8. One slice from the 3-slice pizza is clearly bigger.

Adding denominators. 1/4 + 1/4 = 2/8 (wrong - the child adds both top and bottom). The visual fix: show two quarter-shaded bars joined together. The result is half the bar, not 2/8.

Confusing “fraction of” with multiplication. “Find 1/3 of 12” stumps children who don’t realise “of” means multiply. Divide 12 objects into 3 equal groups; each has 4.

Equivalent fraction confusion. A child won’t believe that 2/4 = 1/2 because “the numbers are different.” Fold a piece of paper in half, then fold it again. The shaded area is the same whether you call it 1/2 or 2/4.

What you can do today

Pick one of the four mistakes above. Sit with your child and draw it on paper, however rough.

You don’t need to be good at drawing. A rectangle with lines through it is enough. The point is to make the fraction visible - to connect the abstract symbol to something your child can see and touch.

If they already understand these ideas visually, they’re in solid shape for Class 7 fractions. If they struggle, this is the gap to close now, before it compounds.

How GuruMode handles this

GuruMode’s Class 6 fraction missions follow NCERT Chapter 7 exactly: same sequence, same concepts, same progression.

The difference is that every concept is taught interactively with visual methods. Your child doesn’t just watch a video about equivalent fractions - they build equivalent fractions on screen, test them, and see what happens when they get it wrong.

When your child makes the “bigger denominator means bigger fraction” mistake, the app detects it and routes to a visual recovery: fraction bars, pizza models, number lines.

You see “Strong on fraction on a number line. Still weak on comparing unlike fractions.” Not just “completed Chapter 7.”

Try it free

See exactly where your child’s understanding holds - and where it doesn’t.

GuruMode gives your child interactive CBSE Maths missions and gives you chapter-level progress you can actually read.

Frequently asked questions

NCERT Chapter 7 covers the essentials well. The issue is usually not the breadth of content but the depth of understanding. A child who deeply understands NCERT Chapter 7 - visually and conceptually - is better prepared for Class 7 than a child who has solved 200 problems from extra books without grasping why the methods work.
Yes. It’s a sign of procedural knowledge without conceptual understanding. It works for routine problems and breaks on new question types. Encourage your child to explain why each step works, not just what step comes next.
Almost everywhere. Directly in Class 7 (unlike fractions, multiplication, division), Class 8 (rational numbers), and Class 9 (number systems). Indirectly in percentages, ratios, algebra, and geometry. A fraction gap in Class 6 echoes through every later year.
Both have a role. Physical objects like paper folding and pizza slices build the initial visual understanding. Interactive apps - where your child manipulates fractions, not just watches - reinforce and extend it. Passive video alone is rarely enough.
If the gap is specific - say, comparing unlike fractions - it can often be closed in a few focused sessions, around 3-5 days of fifteen-minute practice. If the gap is foundational, it takes longer - two to three weeks of consistent visual practice. The key is identifying the specific gap first.