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    Q&A - P3 Math

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

      shurley197323:
      Thks for the answer. But still trying vey hard to explain.

      Split 338 into 2 portions - 1 Big and 1 Small, with the Big more than the Small by 82.

      So the find the Big,
      338 + 82 = 420
      420 / 2 = 210 bookmarks

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      • P Offline
        peterch
        last edited by

        [Moderator's note: Topics merged.]


        Hi friends,

        I would like to share with you as I am doing ,math exercise for my boy from previous year exam paper.
        We come to 1 question which I think it should be a wrong/incomplete question.

        Q: Ramu saw 26 sheep and chickens in a farm. He counted a total of 76 legs. How many sheep were there?

        I would appreciate your time and thought for this.

        Regards...

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        • S Offline
          schellen
          last edited by

          What level is this question for? It seems to me that algebra is a good way to solve it but I think you’d better wait for someone with more experience.

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          • P Offline
            peterch
            last edited by

            schellen:
            What level is this question for? It seems to me that algebra is a good way to solve it but I think you'd better wait for someone with more experience.

            Sorry, it was for primary 4.

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            • K Offline
              kingboo
              last edited by

              peterch:
              schellen:

              What level is this question for? It seems to me that algebra is a good way to solve it but I think you'd better wait for someone with more experience.


              Sorry, it was for primary 4.


              The answer is 12 sheep and 14 chickens. 12x4=48( 4 legs per sheep) and 14x2=28 (2 legs per chicken).

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              • T Offline
                tianzhu
                last edited by

                Hi


                For this P4 question, a student may use Guess and Check to solve it as the figures are quite small.Another way is making a supposition or assuming method which is more efficient for questions involving bigger numbers.

                Hope this helps.

                http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2510/3866423107_c6a0729996_o.jpg\">

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                • A Offline
                  acforfamily
                  last edited by

                  peterch:

                  Q: Ramu saw 26 sheep and chickens in a farm. He counted a total of 76 legs. How many sheep were there?
                  I agree with Tianzhu's assumption method i.e. assume all are chicken first ( alternatively sheep first). This is the method recommended for that level.

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                  • P Offline
                    peterch
                    last edited by

                    acforfamily:
                    peterch:


                    Q: Ramu saw 26 sheep and chickens in a farm. He counted a total of 76 legs. How many sheep were there?

                    I agree with Tianzhu's assumption method i.e. assume all are chicken first ( alternatively sheep first). This is the method recommended for that level.

                    Wow...thanks for the helps friends....regards

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                    • T Offline
                      Tang
                      last edited by

                      EN:
                      Hi Tang


                      I like your solution on qs 1. It's short and simple and the diagram helps.
                      I would like to try teaching my kids using your method but I'm a bit lost as to how to explain on certain portion.

                      I understand the top part but stuck in the following:

                      2 u --> 89 - 65 = 24

                      I understand where the 2u come from but how to explain why

                      89-65 =

                      TIA
                      The difference is 2 u.
                      And the difference between the 2 models is 89 - 65.

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                      • W Offline
                        wangsoon
                        last edited by

                        My son has school homework which I was not able to do without resorting to algebra. Hope you can help.


                        3 similar apples and 3 similar pears cost $7.50
                        5 apples and 4 pears cost $11.
                        What is the cost of 1 apple.

                        Any ideas?

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