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Collection of Rectangle Fractions (20)
Looking for Rectangle Fractions? Here you will find a carefully collected gallery of free images in high quality. Each Rectangle Fractions can be downloaded for school projects, presentations, websites or creative designs. Need a custom image? Try our free image generator. These cliparts are free for personal use. Please read the full terms of use.
A simple 4×3 table layout with a highlighted blue header row-ideal for structuring information clearly.
A simple yet striking 2×3 grid where five orange tiles contrast with one white tile in the bottom-right position.
This grid illustrates how color intensity diminishes row by row, with blue squares gradually replaced by gray ones.
A five-part vertical segmentation-three purple bars and two white bars-demonstrating a 60% to 40% split.
A simple yet powerful three-part circle used to visualize balanced divisions or interconnected components.
A simple 2x4 grid where the bottom-right cell is highlighted in blue to indicate selection or emphasis.
These 20 colorful rectangle fraction models help learners visualize halves, thirds, fourths, and more-ideal for classroom instruction or digital practice.
A colorful grid of square fraction models illustrating halves, thirds, quarters, fifths, and more-perfect for hands-on learning.
A minimalist bar chart showing six uniform white bars followed by a highlighted brown bar on the right, emphasizing the last item or stage.
Six everyday objects and shapes divided precisely in half to help children grasp the concept of equal parts.
A simple yet effective pie chart showing a 50% shaded vs. 50% unshaded distribution across four quadrants.
Figure (3) illustrates a rectangle split into shaded and unshaded halves; Figure (4) depicts a line with a distinct thick middle section.
Set 2 of fraction bar models illustrating equivalent fractions: 2/4, 3/6, 5/10, and 6/12 using color-coded segments.
A vibrant, hands-on worksheet from “The Enlightened Elephant” that uses color-coded bars and grid partitions to model fractions visually.
Two grid diagrams demonstrate that improper fractions like 10/10 (exactly 1) and 10/9 (greater than 1) are always ≥1.
Color-coded fraction manipulatives-perfect for visual learners exploring part-whole relationships in elementary math.