Lesson 32 Homework 4.5 〈VERIFIED • ANTHOLOGY〉

Always check if your final answer can be simplified (e.g., 24two-fourths 12one-half

If you have landed on this page, you are likely a fourth-grade student, a parent helping with math homework, or a teacher looking for additional resources. The search term typically refers to a specific assignment from the Eureka Math (or EngageNY) curriculum, Module 5 (Grade 4). lesson 32 homework 4.5

These visual models are the best way to help students see what happens when you take a fraction away from a whole or mixed number. Example A: Find on your number line. Because we are subtracting 15one-fifth Always check if your final answer can be simplified (e

: Subtracting a fraction larger than the fractional part of the mixed number (e.g., Common Strategies Subtract to Reach a Whole Number Example: To solve , decompose four-fifths two-fifths two-fifths Subtract the first part: Subtract the remaining part from the whole: Take from One Whole Example: For , decompose Subtract from the whole: Add the results together: Step-by-Step Problem Solving (RDW Process) The curriculum encourages the Read-Draw-Write (RDW) process for all homework problems: the problem carefully. Example A: Find on your number line