The most important concept in the teaching of fractions is that of equivalent fractions. This is not a topic that should be taught in isolation, but a fundamental concept on which virtually all fraction work is based.
Beginning with a fraction such as 30/40 we can cancel the fraction by any common factor of 30 and 40 such as 5, so 30/40 = 6/8. We can then cancel by 2 to get 3/4. Of course we could go straight from 30/40 to 3/4 by cancelling by 10. There are two important facts to understand: a) whichever way we wish to cancel, the answer will always come to the same in the end (in this case 3/4), and b) cancelling is not the same as dividing since dividing actually changes the value of the fraction. Cancelling keeps the value the same but the numerator (top number) and the denominator (bottom number) are changed.
The opposite of cancelling is lecnacing (reverse the letters of cancel to indicate the reverse process). So we can lecnac 30/40 by 2 to get 60/80 or lecnac 30/40 by 7 to get 210/280 etc.
All the fractions we have so far obtained (3/4, 6/8, 30/40, 60/80 and 210/280) are EQUIVALENT FRACTIONS, i.e. fractions which look different, but actually have the same value.
By continuing to cancel and lecnac fractions by different numbers we could obtain a chain of an infinite number of fractions, all of which are equivalent to all the others in the chain. This concept really needs to be understood before fractions are added, subtracted, multiplied or divided.
Now we can see why the explanations others have given above work:
Lecnac 3/5 by 2 to get 6/10 and lecnac 1/2 by 5 to get 6/10 and the rest is easy. Notice by the way that when we say 11/10 = 1 1/10, we are using the fact that 10/10 is EQUIVALENT to 1/1, i.e just 1 (One whole one, that is).
Hope this helps.