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Recognising & Simplifying Ratios
Rung 3 of 4 · The traps

The Three Ratio Traps

Ratios look friendly, then quietly catch people out three ways: the order, the units, and mistaking a ratio for a fraction of the whole. Let's spot all three.


ExploreClick each tab, then hit “flip / try it” to see the trap and the fix.
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The maths of ratios is easy. The marks are lost on three small habits — so let's name them before they bite.

Trap 1 — Order Matters

A ratio reads left to right, and the first number always names the first thing. So cordial : water = 2 : 3 is a different drink from 3 : 2 — one is weaker, one is stronger. Unlike adding (where 2 + 3 = 3 + 2), a ratio is not the same when you swap the numbers. Always match each number to its label, in order.

Trap 2 — Same Units First

You can only compare like with like. If a question gives 50 cm : 2 m, writing "50 : 2" is wrong — you'd be comparing centimetres against metres. Convert one first: 2 m = 200 cm, so it's really 50 : 200 = 1 : 4. Get both parts into the same unit before you simplify.

Say it plainly: keep the order tied to the labels, get both parts in the same unit, and remember a ratio compares the parts to each other — not part to whole.

Trap 3 — It's Not a Fraction of the Whole

If a class is girls : boys = 2 : 3, it's tempting to say "girls are 2/3 of the class". They're not. Add the parts: 2 + 3 = 5. So there are 5 parts in total, and girls are 2 out of 5 (that's 2/5), boys 3 out of 5. A ratio compares the two groups to each other; to turn it into a fraction of the whole, you have to add the parts first to find the total.

Us, Thinking Out Loud

Give me a real mix where swapping the order would actually ruin it.

Why do we add the parts before we can write a ratio as a fraction of the whole?