Estimate a product to solve an inequality
Among the numbers from to , how many different numbers can go in the to make the statement true?
Show solution
Understand
Using a single digit from 0 to 9 in the box, I need to count how many of those digits make 29 times the box greater than 208.
- The inequality is 29 times the box > 208.
- The box can hold any whole number from 0 to 9.
- How many of the digits 0 through 9 make the inequality true.
- Only single digits 0,1,2,...,9 are allowed in the box.
- The statement must be strictly greater than 208 (equal does not count).
Plan
#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #5 Look for a Pattern
Estimate first: 29 is close to 30, so 29 times a digit is a bit under 30 times that digit. That points to the boundary near 7, and because 29 times the box grows steadily as the box grows, once a digit works every larger digit works too. So I just check the digits around the boundary and count the ones that pass.
Execute
Review
208 divided by 29 is about 7.2, so the box must be at least 8. Digits 8 and 9 are the only single digits that reach that, giving 2 numbers. Spot checks confirm: 29 times 8 = 232 (true) and 29 times 7 = 203 (false).
Convert to division (tool 8/11): solve 208 divided by 29 is about 7.17, so the box must be 8 or more, and within 0 to 9 that is the two values 8 and 9.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NBT.A.3Multiply one-digit whole numbers by multiples of 10 — Estimating 29 times the digit by rounding 29 to 30 to locate the boundary.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Checking exact products and counting which digits satisfy the inequality.