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    Q&A - P3 Math

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Primary 3
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    • T Offline
      tracywham
      last edited by

      hello, i need help on this question (with model drawing will be greatly appreciated):


      Siti had 6 times as many apples as David at first. After Siti had given 450 apples to David, they had an equal number of apples.

      a) Find the number of apples David have at first.

      b) David gave away some apples and had half the number of apples
      Siti had. How many apples did David give away?

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • J Offline
        jieheng
        last edited by

        tracywham:
        hello, i need help on this question (with model drawing will be greatly appreciated):


        Siti had 6 times as many apples as David at first. After Siti had given 450 apples to David, they had an equal number of apples.

        a) Find the number of apples David have at first.

        b) David gave away some apples and had half the number of apples
        Siti had. How many apples did David give away?
        At first
        S [2u][2u][2u][2u][2u][2u] --> (12u)
        D [2u]

        After Siti had given 450 apples to David, they had an equal number of apples.
        S [2u][2u][2u][1u] --> (7u)
        D [2u][2u][2u][1u] --> (7u)

        12u - 7u --> 450
        5u --> 450
        1u --> 90

        a)

        2u --> 2*90 = 180

        the number of apples that David had at first = 180

        b)

        7u --> 7*90 = 630

        630/2 = 315

        the number of apples that David gave away = 315

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        • T Offline
          tracywham
          last edited by

          Thank you for your answer. I du\on’t quite understand. Where does the 2u and 12u comes from Siti?

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • J Offline
            jieheng
            last edited by

            tracywham:
            Thank you for your answer. I du\\on't quite understand. Where does the 2u and 12u comes from Siti?

            Method 1

            Siti had 6 times as many apples as David at first

            If we assume D --> 1u , then S --> 6u , total (D+S) --> 7u

            In the end , they had an equal number of apples

            D --> 3.5u and S --> 3.5u after S gave 2.5u to D

            2.5u --> 450
            1u --> 180

            For this method , you will have the decimal points , 3.5u and 2.5u .

            Method 2

            Siti had 6 times as many apples as David at first

            I assume D --> 2u , then S --> 12u , total (D+S) --> 14u

            In the end , they had an equal number of apples

            D --> 7u and S --> 7u after S gave 5u to D

            5u --> 450
            1u --> 90

            2u --> 2*90 = 180

            For this method , you will have the whole numbers , 7u and 5u

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • N Offline
              numeric
              last edited by

              tracywham:
              hello, i need help on this question (with model drawing will be greatly appreciated):


              Siti had 6 times as many apples as David at first. After Siti had given 450 apples to David, they had an equal number of apples.

              a) Find the number of apples David have at first.

              b) David gave away some apples and had half the number of apples
              Siti had. How many apples did David give away?

              http://i50.tinypic.com/doawr4.jpg\">

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              • mother777M Offline
                mother777
                last edited by

                jieheng:
                tracywham:

                Thank you for your answer. I du\\on't quite understand. Where does the 2u and 12u comes from Siti?


                Method 1

                Siti had 6 times as many apples as David at first

                If we assume D --> 1u , then S --> 6u , total (D+S) --> 7u

                In the end , they had an equal number of apples

                D --> 3.5u and S --> 3.5u after S gave 2.5u to D

                2.5u --> 450
                1u --> 180

                For this method , you will have the decimal points , 3.5u and 2.5u .

                Method 2

                Siti had 6 times as many apples as David at first

                I assume D --> 2u , then S --> 12u , total (D+S) --> 14u

                In the end , they had an equal number of apples

                D --> 7u and S --> 7u after S gave 5u to D

                5u --> 450
                1u --> 90

                2u --> 2*90 = 180

                For this method , you will have the whole numbers , 7u and 5u

                Hi,
                my DD is in P3 this year and I wonder if kids will be taught in which situation we need to assume 1u or 2u in such questions?

                If you have any idea pls help to advise because I am not sure Kids will be taught to handle division with decimal numbers in P3.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • J Offline
                  jieheng
                  last edited by

                  mother777:
                  jieheng:

                  [quote=\"tracywham\"]Thank you for your answer. I du\\on't quite understand. Where does the 2u and 12u comes from Siti?


                  Method 1

                  Siti had 6 times as many apples as David at first

                  If we assume D --> 1u , then S --> 6u , total (D+S) --> 7u

                  In the end , they had an equal number of apples

                  D --> 3.5u and S --> 3.5u after S gave 2.5u to D

                  2.5u --> 450
                  1u --> 180

                  For this method , you will have the decimal points , 3.5u and 2.5u .

                  Method 2

                  Siti had 6 times as many apples as David at first

                  I assume D --> 2u , then S --> 12u , total (D+S) --> 14u

                  In the end , they had an equal number of apples

                  D --> 7u and S --> 7u after S gave 5u to D

                  5u --> 450
                  1u --> 90

                  2u --> 2*90 = 180

                  For this method , you will have the whole numbers , 7u and 5u

                  Hi,
                  my DD is in P3 this year and I wonder if kids will be taught in which situation we need to assume 1u or 2u in such questions?

                  If you have any idea pls help to advise because I am not sure Kids will be taught to handle division with decimal numbers in P3.[/quote]Hi ,

                  If the question is
                  A had 6 times as many apples as B at first ................In the end , they had an equal number of apples.

                  It is better to make assumptions for A and B that their total no to be multiples of 2 .

                  First , assume B as 1u , then A --> 6u but their total no will be 7u which is not the multiples of 2.

                  Next , assume B as 2u , then A --> 12u and their total no will be 14u which is the multiples of 2.

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                  • mother777M Offline
                    mother777
                    last edited by

                    Hi JieHeng,

                    Ok I understand the concept now.
                    thanks for the clear explanation πŸ™‚

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                    • A Offline
                      angel
                      last edited by

                      Hi, I need help in solving this problem sum.


                      Elson has less than 40 sweets in a box.
                      When he ties the sweets in packets of 6, he has 2 sweets left.
                      When he ties them in packets of 8, he is short of 2 sweets.
                      How many sweets does he have in the box?

                      Thank you. πŸ˜„

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                      • mother777M Offline
                        mother777
                        last edited by

                        Multiples of 6: 6,12,18,24,36

                        Add 2. : 8,14,20,26,38

                        Multiples of 8: 8,16,24,32,40
                        Minus 2. : 6,14,22,30,38

                        Is it answer could be 14 or 38?

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