Learning Targets
Many situations can be represented by equations. Writing an equation to represent a situation can help us express how quantities in the situation are related to each other, and can help us reason about unknown quantities whose value we want to know. Here are three situations:
We see the same three numbers in the situations: 10, 34, and 144. How could we represent each situation with an equation?
In the first situation, there is one shopping cart with length 34 and then an unknown number of carts with length 10. Similarly, Kiran has 34 dollars saved and then will save 10 each week for an unknown number of weeks. Both situations have one part of 34 and then equal parts of size 10 that all add together to 144. Their equation is 34 + 10x = 144.
Since it takes 11 groups of 10 to get from 34 to 144, the value of in these two situations is (144 - 34) ÷ 10 or 11. There will be 11 shopping carts in each row, and it will take Kiran 11 weeks to raise the money for the guitar.
In the bakery situation, there is one part of 10 and then 144 equal parts of unknown size that all add together to 34. The equation is 10 + 144x = 34. Since 24 is needed to get from 10 to 34, the value of x is (34 - 10) ÷ 144 or (1/6). There is (1/6) cup of sugar in each giant muffin.
Draw a tape diagram to represent each situation. For some of the situations, you need to decide what to represent with a variable.
How is the last situation different from the others?
Why was it tough to draw a diagram for the last question?
Each situation in the previous activity is represented by one of these equations.
No summary video.