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    Q&A - PSLE Math

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Primary 6 & PSLE
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    • T Offline
      tianzhu
      last edited by

      homeworkmummy:

      Thanks Tianzhu for the info.
      Hi

      You’re welcome.

      I believe she’ll understand it better when the teacher has covered the topic.

      Best wishes

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • C Offline
        Chan09
        last edited by

        I do need help as I can solve using algebra but even looking at models this is tough:

        a group of friends play tennis. each of them play with everyone else. Ann played with 4 times as many girls as boys. Bob played with 5 times as many girls as boys.
        a) how many people were there altogether? ans: 31 people
        b) were there more boys than girls and how many more? ans: 19 more girls than boys

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • MathIzzzFunM Offline
          MathIzzzFun
          last edited by

          Chan09:
          I do need help as I can solve using algebra but even looking at models this is tough:

          a group of friends play tennis. each of them play with everyone else. Ann played with 4 times as many girls as boys. Bob played with 5 times as many girls as boys.
          a) how many people were there altogether? ans: 31 people
          b) were there more boys than girls and how many more? ans: 19 more girls than boys
          Hi

          Ann played with 4 times as many girls as boys, so
          Girls : Boys --> 4u +1 : 1u,
          total 5u + 1 people and there were 3u + 1 more girls

          Bob played with 5 times as many girls as boys,
          Girls : Boys --> 4u + 1 : 1u -1 = 5 : 1

          cross multiply or equalize --> 4u + 1 = 5u -5
          1u --> 6
          5u + 1 = 31
          3u+1 --> 19

          There were 31 people and there were 19 more girls than boys.

          cheers.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • H Offline
            hazelwong
            last edited by

            Hi, I came across this type of question:

            Charlie had $490 more than Eugene. Charlie spent 1/7 of his money, Eugene spent 1/5 of his money. If Eugene spent $20 less than Charlie, find the total amount of money the children had in the end.
            The answer given is such a complex model (subdivided into many units) :? that I wonder if there is an easier way?
            TIA 😄

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • MathIzzzFunM Offline
              MathIzzzFun
              last edited by

              hazelwong:
              Hi, I came across this type of question:

              Charlie had $490 more than Eugene. Charlie spent 1/7 of his money, Eugene spent 1/5 of his money. If Eugene spent $20 less than Charlie, find the total amount of money the children had in the end.
              The answer given is such a complex model (subdivided into many units) :? that I wonder if there is an easier way?
              TIA 😄
              Hi

              Eugene's money --> 5 units
              Eugene spent --> 1 unit
              Charlie spent --> 1 unit + 20
              Charlie's money --> 7 x (1 unit + 20) = 7 units + 140
              So, 7 units + 140 = 5 units + 490
              1 unit --> 175
              ...you should be able to complete the solution from here 😄

              cheers.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • H Offline
                hazelwong
                last edited by

                MathIzzzFun:
                hazelwong:

                Hi, I came across this type of question:

                Charlie had $490 more than Eugene. Charlie spent 1/7 of his money, Eugene spent 1/5 of his money. If Eugene spent $20 less than Charlie, find the total amount of money the children had in the end.
                The answer given is such a complex model (subdivided into many units) :? that I wonder if there is an easier way?
                TIA 😄

                Hi

                Eugene's money --> 5 units
                Eugene spent --> 1 unit
                Charlie spent --> 1 unit + 20
                Charlie's money --> 7 x (1 unit + 20) = 7 units + 140
                So, 7 units + 140 = 5 units + 490
                1 unit --> 175
                ...you should be able to complete the solution from here 😄

                cheers.

                Ahhh... tha's so much easier than the proposed method. Looks like sometimes some books are not so good, despite all their claims!
                Thanks so much!
                :thankyou:

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • M Offline
                  mathnoobs
                  last edited by

                  MathIzzzFun:
                  Chan09:

                  I do need help as I can solve using algebra but even looking at models this is tough:

                  a group of friends play tennis. each of them play with everyone else. Ann played with 4 times as many girls as boys. Bob played with 5 times as many girls as boys.
                  a) how many people were there altogether? ans: 31 people
                  b) were there more boys than girls and how many more? ans: 19 more girls than boys

                  Hi

                  Ann played with 4 times as many girls as boys, so
                  Girls : Boys --> 4u +1 : 1u,
                  total 5u + 1 people and there were 3u + 1 more girls

                  Bob played with 5 times as many girls as boys,
                  Girls : Boys --> 4u + 1 : 1u -1 = 5 : 1

                  cross multiply or equalize --> 4u + 1 = 5u -5
                  1u --> 6
                  5u + 1 = 31
                  3u+1 --> 19

                  There were 31 people and there were 19 more girls than boys.

                  cheers.

                  I'm afraid I don't get this:

                  Bob played with 5 times as many girls as boys,
                  Girls : Boys --> 4u + 1 : 1u -1 = 5 : 1

                  why is Boys = 1u-1 ? and Girls = 4u+1 ? is that from the previous statement ?

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • 2 Offline
                    2DMommy
                    last edited by

                    Please help with this question :


                    After a maths quiz, Mr Li gave the 3 prize winners a box of pencils to share. The 1st winner received 2/3 of the pencils plus 1/3 of a pencil. The 2nd winner received 2/3 of the remainder plus 1/3 of a pencil. The 3rd winner received 2/3 of the new remainder plus 1/3 of a pencil, but there were no pencils left after this. How many pencils were there in all ?

                    thanks !

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • MathIzzzFunM Offline
                      MathIzzzFun
                      last edited by

                      mathnoobs:
                      MathIzzzFun:

                      [quote=\"Chan09\"]I do need help as I can solve using algebra but even looking at models this is tough:

                      a group of friends play tennis. each of them play with everyone else. Ann played with 4 times as many girls as boys. Bob played with 5 times as many girls as boys.
                      a) how many people were there altogether? ans: 31 people
                      b) were there more boys than girls and how many more? ans: 19 more girls than boys

                      Hi

                      Ann played with 4 times as many girls as boys, so
                      Girls : Boys --> 4u +1 : 1u,
                      total 5u + 1 people and there were 3u + 1 more girls

                      Bob played with 5 times as many girls as boys,
                      Girls : Boys --> 4u + 1 : 1u -1 = 5 : 1

                      cross multiply or equalize --> 4u + 1 = 5u -5
                      1u --> 6
                      5u + 1 = 31
                      3u+1 --> 19

                      There were 31 people and there were 19 more girls than boys.

                      cheers.

                      I'm afraid I don't get this:

                      Bob played with 5 times as many girls as boys,
                      Girls : Boys --> 4u + 1 : 1u -1 = 5 : 1

                      why is Boys = 1u-1 ? and Girls = 4u+1 ? is that from the previous statement ?[/quote]Hi

                      Ann played with 4 times as many girls as boys, so if she played with 1 unit of boys, she played with 4 units of girls. So, total number of girls = 4 units + 1 (Ann)

                      So, Bob will play with 1 unit - 1 (Bob) of boys and 4 units + 1 of girls.

                      cheers.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • A Offline
                        anneshirleygilbert
                        last edited by

                        Hi MathIzzzFun,


                        Charlie had $490 more than Eugene. Charlie spent 1/7 of his money, Eugene spent 1/5 of his money. If Eugene spent $20 less than Charlie, find the total amount of money the children had in the end.


                        Eugene’s money –> 5 units
                        Eugene spent –> 1 unit
                        Charlie spent –> 1 unit + 20
                        Charlie’s money –> 7 x (1 unit + 20) = 7 units + 140
                        So, 7 units + 140 = 5 units + 490
                        1 unit –> 175
                        …you should be able to complete the solution from here

                        I’m a little confused. Should what Charlie spent have been 1u + 70?
                        seeing he spent (1/7 of 7 units and 1/7 of $490)?
                        We did this question using simultaneous equations and our answers are $1170 for Charlie and $700 for Eugene. Are our answers correct?

                        TIA

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0

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