Sensim Math · Depth 한국어

← 3-2 · Solve missing data from ratio or sum clues · Solve a Table or Graph Step by Step from Clues

Solve missing data from ratio or sum clues · 8 practice problems

3.MD.B.33.NF.A.13.NBT.A.2

Generated variants — 8

Freshly produced from the archetype’s parameters — problem, figure, and solution derived together.

Variant 1 answer: 470 households

The amount for each item was surveyed and shown in a pictograph. Find the amount for the Mugunghwa item.

Amount by Item (pictograph)

Item Amount
Dalbit
Chowon (5 large pictures, 3 small pictures)
Mugunghwa
Taeyang

In the pictograph, each large picture stands for 100 households100\ \text{households} and each small picture stands for 10 households10\ \text{households}.

Conditions

  • The Dalbit item has 4040 fewer than the Chowon item.
  • The Taeyang item has 57\dfrac{5}{7} as many as the Dalbit item.
  • The Mugunghwa item has 120120 more than the Taeyang item.
Amount by Item (pictograph) Item Amount Dalbit Chowon Mugunghwa Taeyang = 100 households = 10 households
Show solution

Understand

A pictograph gives Chowon as 5 large picture symbols (100 each) and 3 small (10 each). Three clues link Dalbit, Taeyang, and Mugunghwa to one another. We find Mugunghwa's amount.

Givens
  • Chowon (from figure) = 5 large + 3 small symbols; 1 large = 100, 1 small = 10 households.
  • Dalbit = Chowon - 40.
  • Taeyang = 5/7 of Dalbit.
  • Mugunghwa = Taeyang + 120.
Unknowns
  • The amount for the Mugunghwa item.
Constraints
  • Amounts are whole numbers.
  • For Taeyang to be a whole number, Dalbit must be a multiple of 7.

Plan

#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems

Each clue depends on the previous one, so we solve in order (Chowon -> Dalbit -> Taeyang -> Mugunghwa), each a small subproblem, chaining toward Mugunghwa.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Chowon shows 5 large symbols and 3 small ones. Each large is 100 and each small is 10: 5 x 100 + 3 x 10 = 530.
5×100+3×10=5305 \times 100 + 3 \times 10 = 530
Turning the scaled symbols into a count is the core skill of a scaled pictograph.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Dalbit has 40 fewer than Chowon: 530 - 40 = 490. (This is a multiple of 7, so the next fraction step gives a whole number.)
53040=490530 - 40 = 490
Subtracting within the thousands is Grade 3 place-value work.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.NF.A.1
Taeyang is 5/7 of Dalbit. Splitting 490 into 7 equal parts gives 490 / 7 = 70, and taking 5 of them gives Taeyang = 5 x 70 = 350.
57×490=5×70=350\tfrac{5}{7}\times 490 = 5 \times 70 = 350
Understanding 5/7 as 5 of the 7 equal parts of a whole is the Grade 3 meaning of a fraction.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Mugunghwa has 120 more than Taeyang: 350 + 120 = 470.
350+120=470350 + 120 = 470
Adding 120 to 350 is a clean within-1000 addition.
Answer: 470 households

Review

Mugunghwa (470) follows from the chain: the 5/7 clue forces Dalbit to be a multiple of 7; 490 = 7 x 70, so Taeyang = 5 x 70 = 350 and Mugunghwa = 350 + 120 = 470, all whole numbers.

Work the fraction as a subproblem first: one part of 490 is 70, so 5/7 is 5 x 70 = 350, then add 120 to reach 470 - same answer.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading Chowon's value from the large and small symbols.
  • 3.NF.A.1 Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Interpreting 5/7 of Dalbit as 5 of its 7 equal parts.
  • 3.NBT.A.2 Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Subtracting 40 and adding 120 along the chain of clues.
💡 Solve the clues one after another - read the graph, then 5 of the 7 equal parts, then add 120!
Variant 2 answer: 426 units

The amount for each item was surveyed and shown in a pictograph. Find the amount for the Vera item.

Amount by Item (pictograph)

Item Amount
Lila
Rosa (6 large pictures, 0 small pictures)
Vera
Nina

In the pictograph, each large picture stands for 100 units100\ \text{units} and each small picture stands for 10 units10\ \text{units}.

Conditions

  • The Lila item has 4040 fewer than the Rosa item.
  • The Nina item has 35\dfrac{3}{5} as many as the Lila item.
  • The Vera item has 9090 more than the Nina item.
Amount by Item (pictograph) Item Amount Lila Rosa Vera Nina = 100 units = 10 units
Show solution

Understand

A pictograph gives Rosa as 6 large picture symbols (100 each) and 0 small (10 each). Three clues link Lila, Nina, and Vera to one another. We find Vera's amount.

Givens
  • Rosa (from figure) = 6 large + 0 small symbols; 1 large = 100, 1 small = 10 units.
  • Lila = Rosa - 40.
  • Nina = 3/5 of Lila.
  • Vera = Nina + 90.
Unknowns
  • The amount for the Vera item.
Constraints
  • Amounts are whole numbers.
  • For Nina to be a whole number, Lila must be a multiple of 5.

Plan

#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems

Each clue depends on the previous one, so we solve in order (Rosa -> Lila -> Nina -> Vera), each a small subproblem, chaining toward Vera.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Rosa shows 6 large symbols and 0 small ones. Each large is 100 and each small is 10: 6 x 100 + 0 x 10 = 600.
6×100+0×10=6006 \times 100 + 0 \times 10 = 600
Turning the scaled symbols into a count is the core skill of a scaled pictograph.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Lila has 40 fewer than Rosa: 600 - 40 = 560. (This is a multiple of 5, so the next fraction step gives a whole number.)
60040=560600 - 40 = 560
Subtracting within the thousands is Grade 3 place-value work.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.NF.A.1
Nina is 3/5 of Lila. Splitting 560 into 5 equal parts gives 560 / 5 = 112, and taking 3 of them gives Nina = 3 x 112 = 336.
35×560=3×112=336\tfrac{3}{5}\times 560 = 3 \times 112 = 336
Understanding 3/5 as 3 of the 5 equal parts of a whole is the Grade 3 meaning of a fraction.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Vera has 90 more than Nina: 336 + 90 = 426.
336+90=426336 + 90 = 426
Adding 90 to 336 is a clean within-1000 addition.
Answer: 426 units

Review

Vera (426) follows from the chain: the 3/5 clue forces Lila to be a multiple of 5; 560 = 5 x 112, so Nina = 3 x 112 = 336 and Vera = 336 + 90 = 426, all whole numbers.

Work the fraction as a subproblem first: one part of 560 is 112, so 3/5 is 3 x 112 = 336, then add 90 to reach 426 - same answer.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading Rosa's value from the large and small symbols.
  • 3.NF.A.1 Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Interpreting 3/5 of Lila as 3 of its 5 equal parts.
  • 3.NBT.A.2 Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Subtracting 40 and adding 90 along the chain of clues.
💡 Solve the clues one after another - read the graph, then 3 of the 5 equal parts, then add 90!
Variant 3 answer: 624 kg

The amount for each item was surveyed and shown in a pictograph. Find the amount for the Lead item.

Amount by Item (pictograph)

Item Amount
Iron
Tin (7 large pictures, 2 small pictures)
Lead
Zinc

In the pictograph, each large picture stands for 100 kg100\ \text{kg} and each small picture stands for 10 kg10\ \text{kg}.

Conditions

  • The Iron item has 4040 fewer than the Tin item.
  • The Zinc item has 45\dfrac{4}{5} as many as the Iron item.
  • The Lead item has 8080 more than the Zinc item.
Amount by Item (pictograph) Item Amount Iron Tin Lead Zinc = 100 kg = 10 kg
Show solution

Understand

A pictograph gives Tin as 7 large picture symbols (100 each) and 2 small (10 each). Three clues link Iron, Zinc, and Lead to one another. We find Lead's amount.

Givens
  • Tin (from figure) = 7 large + 2 small symbols; 1 large = 100, 1 small = 10 kg.
  • Iron = Tin - 40.
  • Zinc = 4/5 of Iron.
  • Lead = Zinc + 80.
Unknowns
  • The amount for the Lead item.
Constraints
  • Amounts are whole numbers.
  • For Zinc to be a whole number, Iron must be a multiple of 5.

Plan

#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems

Each clue depends on the previous one, so we solve in order (Tin -> Iron -> Zinc -> Lead), each a small subproblem, chaining toward Lead.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Tin shows 7 large symbols and 2 small ones. Each large is 100 and each small is 10: 7 x 100 + 2 x 10 = 720.
7×100+2×10=7207 \times 100 + 2 \times 10 = 720
Turning the scaled symbols into a count is the core skill of a scaled pictograph.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Iron has 40 fewer than Tin: 720 - 40 = 680. (This is a multiple of 5, so the next fraction step gives a whole number.)
72040=680720 - 40 = 680
Subtracting within the thousands is Grade 3 place-value work.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.NF.A.1
Zinc is 4/5 of Iron. Splitting 680 into 5 equal parts gives 680 / 5 = 136, and taking 4 of them gives Zinc = 4 x 136 = 544.
45×680=4×136=544\tfrac{4}{5}\times 680 = 4 \times 136 = 544
Understanding 4/5 as 4 of the 5 equal parts of a whole is the Grade 3 meaning of a fraction.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Lead has 80 more than Zinc: 544 + 80 = 624.
544+80=624544 + 80 = 624
Adding 80 to 544 is a clean within-1000 addition.
Answer: 624 kg

Review

Lead (624) follows from the chain: the 4/5 clue forces Iron to be a multiple of 5; 680 = 5 x 136, so Zinc = 4 x 136 = 544 and Lead = 544 + 80 = 624, all whole numbers.

Work the fraction as a subproblem first: one part of 680 is 136, so 4/5 is 4 x 136 = 544, then add 80 to reach 624 - same answer.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading Tin's value from the large and small symbols.
  • 3.NF.A.1 Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Interpreting 4/5 of Iron as 4 of its 5 equal parts.
  • 3.NBT.A.2 Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Subtracting 40 and adding 80 along the chain of clues.
💡 Solve the clues one after another - read the graph, then 4 of the 5 equal parts, then add 80!
Variant 4 answer: 510 books

The amount for each item was surveyed and shown in a pictograph. Find the amount for the Lou item.

Amount by Item (pictograph)

Item Amount
Pat
Sam (5 large pictures, 5 small pictures)
Lou
Kim

In the pictograph, each large picture stands for 100 books100\ \text{books} and each small picture stands for 10 books10\ \text{books}.

Conditions

  • The Pat item has 5050 fewer than the Sam item.
  • The Kim item has 45\dfrac{4}{5} as many as the Pat item.
  • The Lou item has 110110 more than the Kim item.
Amount by Item (pictograph) Item Amount Pat Sam Lou Kim = 100 books = 10 books
Show solution

Understand

A pictograph gives Sam as 5 large picture symbols (100 each) and 5 small (10 each). Three clues link Pat, Kim, and Lou to one another. We find Lou's amount.

Givens
  • Sam (from figure) = 5 large + 5 small symbols; 1 large = 100, 1 small = 10 books.
  • Pat = Sam - 50.
  • Kim = 4/5 of Pat.
  • Lou = Kim + 110.
Unknowns
  • The amount for the Lou item.
Constraints
  • Amounts are whole numbers.
  • For Kim to be a whole number, Pat must be a multiple of 5.

Plan

#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems

Each clue depends on the previous one, so we solve in order (Sam -> Pat -> Kim -> Lou), each a small subproblem, chaining toward Lou.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Sam shows 5 large symbols and 5 small ones. Each large is 100 and each small is 10: 5 x 100 + 5 x 10 = 550.
5×100+5×10=5505 \times 100 + 5 \times 10 = 550
Turning the scaled symbols into a count is the core skill of a scaled pictograph.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Pat has 50 fewer than Sam: 550 - 50 = 500. (This is a multiple of 5, so the next fraction step gives a whole number.)
55050=500550 - 50 = 500
Subtracting within the thousands is Grade 3 place-value work.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.NF.A.1
Kim is 4/5 of Pat. Splitting 500 into 5 equal parts gives 500 / 5 = 100, and taking 4 of them gives Kim = 4 x 100 = 400.
45×500=4×100=400\tfrac{4}{5}\times 500 = 4 \times 100 = 400
Understanding 4/5 as 4 of the 5 equal parts of a whole is the Grade 3 meaning of a fraction.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Lou has 110 more than Kim: 400 + 110 = 510.
400+110=510400 + 110 = 510
Adding 110 to 400 is a clean within-1000 addition.
Answer: 510 books

Review

Lou (510) follows from the chain: the 4/5 clue forces Pat to be a multiple of 5; 500 = 5 x 100, so Kim = 4 x 100 = 400 and Lou = 400 + 110 = 510, all whole numbers.

Work the fraction as a subproblem first: one part of 500 is 100, so 4/5 is 4 x 100 = 400, then add 110 to reach 510 - same answer.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading Sam's value from the large and small symbols.
  • 3.NF.A.1 Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Interpreting 4/5 of Pat as 4 of its 5 equal parts.
  • 3.NBT.A.2 Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Subtracting 50 and adding 110 along the chain of clues.
💡 Solve the clues one after another - read the graph, then 4 of the 5 equal parts, then add 110!
Variant 5 answer: 530 tickets

The amount for each item was surveyed and shown in a pictograph. Find the amount for the Lime item.

Amount by Item (pictograph)

Item Amount
Cyan
Teal (6 large pictures, 4 small pictures)
Lime
Plum

In the pictograph, each large picture stands for 100 tickets100\ \text{tickets} and each small picture stands for 10 tickets10\ \text{tickets}.

Conditions

  • The Cyan item has 4040 fewer than the Teal item.
  • The Plum item has 23\dfrac{2}{3} as many as the Cyan item.
  • The Lime item has 130130 more than the Plum item.
Amount by Item (pictograph) Item Amount Cyan Teal Lime Plum = 100 tickets = 10 tickets
Show solution

Understand

A pictograph gives Teal as 6 large picture symbols (100 each) and 4 small (10 each). Three clues link Cyan, Plum, and Lime to one another. We find Lime's amount.

Givens
  • Teal (from figure) = 6 large + 4 small symbols; 1 large = 100, 1 small = 10 tickets.
  • Cyan = Teal - 40.
  • Plum = 2/3 of Cyan.
  • Lime = Plum + 130.
Unknowns
  • The amount for the Lime item.
Constraints
  • Amounts are whole numbers.
  • For Plum to be a whole number, Cyan must be a multiple of 3.

Plan

#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems

Each clue depends on the previous one, so we solve in order (Teal -> Cyan -> Plum -> Lime), each a small subproblem, chaining toward Lime.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Teal shows 6 large symbols and 4 small ones. Each large is 100 and each small is 10: 6 x 100 + 4 x 10 = 640.
6×100+4×10=6406 \times 100 + 4 \times 10 = 640
Turning the scaled symbols into a count is the core skill of a scaled pictograph.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Cyan has 40 fewer than Teal: 640 - 40 = 600. (This is a multiple of 3, so the next fraction step gives a whole number.)
64040=600640 - 40 = 600
Subtracting within the thousands is Grade 3 place-value work.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.NF.A.1
Plum is 2/3 of Cyan. Splitting 600 into 3 equal parts gives 600 / 3 = 200, and taking 2 of them gives Plum = 2 x 200 = 400.
23×600=2×200=400\tfrac{2}{3}\times 600 = 2 \times 200 = 400
Understanding 2/3 as 2 of the 3 equal parts of a whole is the Grade 3 meaning of a fraction.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Lime has 130 more than Plum: 400 + 130 = 530.
400+130=530400 + 130 = 530
Adding 130 to 400 is a clean within-1000 addition.
Answer: 530 tickets

Review

Lime (530) follows from the chain: the 2/3 clue forces Cyan to be a multiple of 3; 600 = 3 x 200, so Plum = 2 x 200 = 400 and Lime = 400 + 130 = 530, all whole numbers.

Work the fraction as a subproblem first: one part of 600 is 200, so 2/3 is 2 x 200 = 400, then add 130 to reach 530 - same answer.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading Teal's value from the large and small symbols.
  • 3.NF.A.1 Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Interpreting 2/3 of Cyan as 2 of its 3 equal parts.
  • 3.NBT.A.2 Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Subtracting 40 and adding 130 along the chain of clues.
💡 Solve the clues one after another - read the graph, then 2 of the 3 equal parts, then add 130!
Variant 6 answer: 585 trees

The amount for each item was surveyed and shown in a pictograph. Find the amount for the Fir item.

Amount by Item (pictograph)

Item Amount
Ash
Elm (8 large pictures, 0 small pictures)
Fir
Yew

In the pictograph, each large picture stands for 100 trees100\ \text{trees} and each small picture stands for 10 trees10\ \text{trees}.

Conditions

  • The Ash item has 100100 fewer than the Elm item.
  • The Yew item has 34\dfrac{3}{4} as many as the Ash item.
  • The Fir item has 6060 more than the Yew item.
Amount by Item (pictograph) Item Amount Ash Elm Fir Yew = 100 trees = 10 trees
Show solution

Understand

A pictograph gives Elm as 8 large picture symbols (100 each) and 0 small (10 each). Three clues link Ash, Yew, and Fir to one another. We find Fir's amount.

Givens
  • Elm (from figure) = 8 large + 0 small symbols; 1 large = 100, 1 small = 10 trees.
  • Ash = Elm - 100.
  • Yew = 3/4 of Ash.
  • Fir = Yew + 60.
Unknowns
  • The amount for the Fir item.
Constraints
  • Amounts are whole numbers.
  • For Yew to be a whole number, Ash must be a multiple of 4.

Plan

#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems

Each clue depends on the previous one, so we solve in order (Elm -> Ash -> Yew -> Fir), each a small subproblem, chaining toward Fir.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Elm shows 8 large symbols and 0 small ones. Each large is 100 and each small is 10: 8 x 100 + 0 x 10 = 800.
8×100+0×10=8008 \times 100 + 0 \times 10 = 800
Turning the scaled symbols into a count is the core skill of a scaled pictograph.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Ash has 100 fewer than Elm: 800 - 100 = 700. (This is a multiple of 4, so the next fraction step gives a whole number.)
800100=700800 - 100 = 700
Subtracting within the thousands is Grade 3 place-value work.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.NF.A.1
Yew is 3/4 of Ash. Splitting 700 into 4 equal parts gives 700 / 4 = 175, and taking 3 of them gives Yew = 3 x 175 = 525.
34×700=3×175=525\tfrac{3}{4}\times 700 = 3 \times 175 = 525
Understanding 3/4 as 3 of the 4 equal parts of a whole is the Grade 3 meaning of a fraction.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Fir has 60 more than Yew: 525 + 60 = 585.
525+60=585525 + 60 = 585
Adding 60 to 525 is a clean within-1000 addition.
Answer: 585 trees

Review

Fir (585) follows from the chain: the 3/4 clue forces Ash to be a multiple of 4; 700 = 4 x 175, so Yew = 3 x 175 = 525 and Fir = 525 + 60 = 585, all whole numbers.

Work the fraction as a subproblem first: one part of 700 is 175, so 3/4 is 3 x 175 = 525, then add 60 to reach 585 - same answer.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading Elm's value from the large and small symbols.
  • 3.NF.A.1 Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Interpreting 3/4 of Ash as 3 of its 4 equal parts.
  • 3.NBT.A.2 Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Subtracting 100 and adding 60 along the chain of clues.
💡 Solve the clues one after another - read the graph, then 3 of the 4 equal parts, then add 60!
Variant 7 answer: 325 animals

The amount for each item was surveyed and shown in a pictograph. Find the amount for the Elk item.

Amount by Item (pictograph)

Item Amount
Fox
Owl (3 large pictures, 6 small pictures)
Elk
Doe

In the pictograph, each large picture stands for 100 animals100\ \text{animals} and each small picture stands for 10 animals10\ \text{animals}.

Conditions

  • The Fox item has 9090 fewer than the Owl item.
  • The Doe item has 56\dfrac{5}{6} as many as the Fox item.
  • The Elk item has 100100 more than the Doe item.
Amount by Item (pictograph) Item Amount Fox Owl Elk Doe = 100 animals = 10 animals
Show solution

Understand

A pictograph gives Owl as 3 large picture symbols (100 each) and 6 small (10 each). Three clues link Fox, Doe, and Elk to one another. We find Elk's amount.

Givens
  • Owl (from figure) = 3 large + 6 small symbols; 1 large = 100, 1 small = 10 animals.
  • Fox = Owl - 90.
  • Doe = 5/6 of Fox.
  • Elk = Doe + 100.
Unknowns
  • The amount for the Elk item.
Constraints
  • Amounts are whole numbers.
  • For Doe to be a whole number, Fox must be a multiple of 6.

Plan

#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems

Each clue depends on the previous one, so we solve in order (Owl -> Fox -> Doe -> Elk), each a small subproblem, chaining toward Elk.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Owl shows 3 large symbols and 6 small ones. Each large is 100 and each small is 10: 3 x 100 + 6 x 10 = 360.
3×100+6×10=3603 \times 100 + 6 \times 10 = 360
Turning the scaled symbols into a count is the core skill of a scaled pictograph.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Fox has 90 fewer than Owl: 360 - 90 = 270. (This is a multiple of 6, so the next fraction step gives a whole number.)
36090=270360 - 90 = 270
Subtracting within the thousands is Grade 3 place-value work.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.NF.A.1
Doe is 5/6 of Fox. Splitting 270 into 6 equal parts gives 270 / 6 = 45, and taking 5 of them gives Doe = 5 x 45 = 225.
56×270=5×45=225\tfrac{5}{6}\times 270 = 5 \times 45 = 225
Understanding 5/6 as 5 of the 6 equal parts of a whole is the Grade 3 meaning of a fraction.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Elk has 100 more than Doe: 225 + 100 = 325.
225+100=325225 + 100 = 325
Adding 100 to 225 is a clean within-1000 addition.
Answer: 325 animals

Review

Elk (325) follows from the chain: the 5/6 clue forces Fox to be a multiple of 6; 270 = 6 x 45, so Doe = 5 x 45 = 225 and Elk = 225 + 100 = 325, all whole numbers.

Work the fraction as a subproblem first: one part of 270 is 45, so 5/6 is 5 x 45 = 225, then add 100 to reach 325 - same answer.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading Owl's value from the large and small symbols.
  • 3.NF.A.1 Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Interpreting 5/6 of Fox as 5 of its 6 equal parts.
  • 3.NBT.A.2 Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Subtracting 90 and adding 100 along the chain of clues.
💡 Solve the clues one after another - read the graph, then 5 of the 6 equal parts, then add 100!
Variant 8 answer: 430 boats

The amount for each item was surveyed and shown in a pictograph. Find the amount for the Reef item.

Amount by Item (pictograph)

Item Amount
Bay
Cove (4 large pictures, 8 small pictures)
Reef
Isle

In the pictograph, each large picture stands for 100 boats100\ \text{boats} and each small picture stands for 10 boats10\ \text{boats}.

Conditions

  • The Bay item has 6060 fewer than the Cove item.
  • The Isle item has 23\dfrac{2}{3} as many as the Bay item.
  • The Reef item has 150150 more than the Isle item.
Amount by Item (pictograph) Item Amount Bay Cove Reef Isle = 100 boats = 10 boats
Show solution

Understand

A pictograph gives Cove as 4 large picture symbols (100 each) and 8 small (10 each). Three clues link Bay, Isle, and Reef to one another. We find Reef's amount.

Givens
  • Cove (from figure) = 4 large + 8 small symbols; 1 large = 100, 1 small = 10 boats.
  • Bay = Cove - 60.
  • Isle = 2/3 of Bay.
  • Reef = Isle + 150.
Unknowns
  • The amount for the Reef item.
Constraints
  • Amounts are whole numbers.
  • For Isle to be a whole number, Bay must be a multiple of 3.

Plan

#11 Work Backwards · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems

Each clue depends on the previous one, so we solve in order (Cove -> Bay -> Isle -> Reef), each a small subproblem, chaining toward Reef.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Cove shows 4 large symbols and 8 small ones. Each large is 100 and each small is 10: 4 x 100 + 8 x 10 = 480.
4×100+8×10=4804 \times 100 + 8 \times 10 = 480
Turning the scaled symbols into a count is the core skill of a scaled pictograph.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Bay has 60 fewer than Cove: 480 - 60 = 420. (This is a multiple of 3, so the next fraction step gives a whole number.)
48060=420480 - 60 = 420
Subtracting within the thousands is Grade 3 place-value work.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.NF.A.1
Isle is 2/3 of Bay. Splitting 420 into 3 equal parts gives 420 / 3 = 140, and taking 2 of them gives Isle = 2 x 140 = 280.
23×420=2×140=280\tfrac{2}{3}\times 420 = 2 \times 140 = 280
Understanding 2/3 as 2 of the 3 equal parts of a whole is the Grade 3 meaning of a fraction.
#11 Work Backwards 3.NBT.A.2
Reef has 150 more than Isle: 280 + 150 = 430.
280+150=430280 + 150 = 430
Adding 150 to 280 is a clean within-1000 addition.
Answer: 430 boats

Review

Reef (430) follows from the chain: the 2/3 clue forces Bay to be a multiple of 3; 420 = 3 x 140, so Isle = 2 x 140 = 280 and Reef = 280 + 150 = 430, all whole numbers.

Work the fraction as a subproblem first: one part of 420 is 140, so 2/3 is 2 x 140 = 280, then add 150 to reach 430 - same answer.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading Cove's value from the large and small symbols.
  • 3.NF.A.1 Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Interpreting 2/3 of Bay as 2 of its 3 equal parts.
  • 3.NBT.A.2 Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Subtracting 60 and adding 150 along the chain of clues.
💡 Solve the clues one after another - read the graph, then 2 of the 3 equal parts, then add 150!