Fragmentation is when things get broken into smaller pieces and don’t work as well together.
Imagine you have a big, beautiful toy box full of blocks. You can build anything, tall towers, cool cars, even spaceships! But one day, someone breaks the box open and throws all the blocks everywhere. Now instead of having one neat place to get your blocks from, they're scattered in different rooms, under the bed, even on the kitchen table.
That’s like fragmentation, when things are spread out in pieces instead of being together. It makes it harder to find what you need and use everything properly.
What does fragmentation look like?
Think about your lunch bag. If it has a sandwich, an apple, and a juice box all in one place, that’s easy to grab and eat. But if the sandwich is in your backpack, the apple is on the table, and the juice box is in your brother's hand, that's fragmentation! You have to hunt for each piece separately.
Sometimes, when things are fragmented, it feels like a game of hide-and-seek with your favorite toys or snacks.
Examples
- A chocolate bar breaking into small pieces when you drop it
- A cake being cut into slices for a party
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See also
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- What are fractions?