"Reviewing Fraction and Decimal Skills" is a worksheet that asks students to review fractions and decimals in many different ways. The skills students will review on the worksheet include:

* Adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing fractions.

* Reducing fractions to their lowest terms.

* Converting improper fractions to mixed fractions.

* Writing decimals in words.

* Reading a decimal in words, like five and seven hundredths, and writing the decimal.

* Converting fractions to decimals.

* Writing the reciprocal of fractions.

* Comparing decimals with greater than and less than symbols.

* Find the least common denominator of two fractions.

Different skills are practiced at different difficulty levels to give students targeted grade-level practice. For example, some fraction addition problems are relatively simple, like 5/11 + 5/11. Others are more difficult, like 3/8 + 2/3. Each worksheet features 9 or 12 problems that are contained in their own section. Students can finish each problem individually for a daily quick review, or they can review the entire worksheet as homework.

Practicing skills together, like decimals and fractions, can help students develop a deeper sense of numbers and how they relate to each other. It also encourages problem-solving and critical thinking, giving students the tools they need to approach tricky problems from different angles.

Having students convert fractions to decimals and decimals to fractions is a good way to get started. You can make fractions trickier by including improper or mixed numbers.

Skills, like being able to write a fraction when hearing the place values read aloud, are important, as is being able to compare fractions and decimals. You can make it trickier by having students compare one fraction and one decimal to figure out which one is bigger and which one is smaller.

You can review a single problem every day as a warm-up before math starts, or students can complete the entire worksheet as a review ahead of a math test.