Use total and clues to fill missing bars
The populations of two towns are being shown in a bar graph. Town A has a population of people. Town B's population is more than half of Town A's population.
Find Town B's population, then draw the bar for Town B to complete the graph.
The vertical axis shows population (number of people), with gridlines marked at , , and . The horizontal axis lists Town A and Town B. Town A's bar is drawn up to , and Town B's bar is still empty.
Show solution
Understand
A bar graph compares two towns' populations. Town A is 100 people. Town B is 3 more than half of Town A. Find Town B's population so its bar can be drawn.
- Town A population = 100 people
- Town B = 3 more than half of Town A's population
- Gridlines are marked at 0, 50, and 100
- Town B's population
- The height of Town B's bar
- Half of Town A must be computed before adding 3
- The bar height matches the population on the same scale as Town A
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #11 Work Backwards
The phrase '3 more than half of Town A' breaks into two ordered subproblems: first halve 100, then add 3. Order matters, so we build the value step by step.
Execute
Review
53 is just over half of 100, which fits 'a bit more than half', and it stays between the 50 and 100 gridlines, so the bar height is sensible.
Work backwards (tool 11): if Town B were exactly half it would be 50; the extra '3 more' nudges it to 53, confirming the answer.
Standards · min grade 4
4.OA.A.3Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Halving Town A and then adding 3 to find Town B3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Placing Town B's bar at the correct height on the population scale