Convert a pictograph into a frequency table
3.MD.B.3
Generated variants — 12
Ms. Reed's class and Mr. Diaz's class were each surveyed about which mountain they want to visit, and the results are shown in the tables below. If the two classes go on the field trip together, which mountain should they choose?
Ms. Reed's class
| Mountain | Blue Lake | Red Canyon | Green Valley | Gold Mesa | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 4 | 9 | 2 | 5 | 20 |
Mr. Diaz's class
| Mountain | Blue Lake | Red Canyon | Green Valley | Gold Mesa | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 3 | 6 | 4 | 1 | 14 |
Show solution
Understand
Two classes each voted for a mountain to visit. To pick one mountain for both classes together, we add each mountain's votes across the two classes and choose the mountain with the most total votes.
- Ms. Reed's class: Blue Lake 4, Red Canyon 9, Green Valley 2, Gold Mesa 5 (total 20).
- Mr. Diaz's class: Blue Lake 3, Red Canyon 6, Green Valley 4, Gold Mesa 1 (total 14).
- The two classes go together, so their votes should be combined.
- Which single mountain the combined classes should choose.
- The best choice is the mountain with the greatest combined number of votes.
Plan
#15 Organize Information in More Ways · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List
Merging the two separate tables into one combined frequency table (re-organizing the data) lets us compare totals. Listing each mountain's combined count makes the largest easy to spot.
Execute
Review
Red Canyon leads with a combined total of 15. All four totals sum to 34, matching 20+14, so the data is accounted for.
Draw a single combined bar graph (Draw a Diagram): the tallest bar is Red Canyon, giving the same choice without writing the sums.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Combining the two tables and comparing category counts to find the largest.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Adding category counts and checking against the total of 34.
Ms. Reed's class and Mr. Diaz's class were each surveyed about which mountain they want to visit, and the results are shown in the tables below. If the two classes go on the field trip together, which mountain should they choose?
Ms. Reed's class
| Mountain | Pine Ridge | Eagle Peak | Mount Rainier | Cedar Butte | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 8 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 15 |
Mr. Diaz's class
| Mountain | Pine Ridge | Eagle Peak | Mount Rainier | Cedar Butte | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 6 | 3 | 5 | 0 | 14 |
Show solution
Understand
Two classes each voted for a mountain to visit. To pick one mountain for both classes together, we add each mountain's votes across the two classes and choose the mountain with the most total votes.
- Ms. Reed's class: Pine Ridge 8, Eagle Peak 4, Mount Rainier 2, Cedar Butte 1 (total 15).
- Mr. Diaz's class: Pine Ridge 6, Eagle Peak 3, Mount Rainier 5, Cedar Butte 0 (total 14).
- The two classes go together, so their votes should be combined.
- Which single mountain the combined classes should choose.
- The best choice is the mountain with the greatest combined number of votes.
Plan
#15 Organize Information in More Ways · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List
Merging the two separate tables into one combined frequency table (re-organizing the data) lets us compare totals. Listing each mountain's combined count makes the largest easy to spot.
Execute
Review
Pine Ridge leads with a combined total of 14. All four totals sum to 29, matching 15+14, so the data is accounted for.
Draw a single combined bar graph (Draw a Diagram): the tallest bar is Pine Ridge, giving the same choice without writing the sums.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Combining the two tables and comparing category counts to find the largest.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Adding category counts and checking against the total of 29.
Ms. Reed's class and Mr. Diaz's class were each surveyed about which mountain they want to visit, and the results are shown in the tables below. If the two classes go on the field trip together, which mountain should they choose?
Ms. Reed's class
| Mountain | Pine Ridge | Eagle Peak | Mount Rainier | Cedar Butte | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 5 | 8 | 7 | 3 | 23 |
Mr. Diaz's class
| Mountain | Pine Ridge | Eagle Peak | Mount Rainier | Cedar Butte | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 6 | 4 | 9 | 5 | 24 |
Show solution
Understand
Two classes each voted for a mountain to visit. To pick one mountain for both classes together, we add each mountain's votes across the two classes and choose the mountain with the most total votes.
- Ms. Reed's class: Pine Ridge 5, Eagle Peak 8, Mount Rainier 7, Cedar Butte 3 (total 23).
- Mr. Diaz's class: Pine Ridge 6, Eagle Peak 4, Mount Rainier 9, Cedar Butte 5 (total 24).
- The two classes go together, so their votes should be combined.
- Which single mountain the combined classes should choose.
- The best choice is the mountain with the greatest combined number of votes.
Plan
#15 Organize Information in More Ways · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List
Merging the two separate tables into one combined frequency table (re-organizing the data) lets us compare totals. Listing each mountain's combined count makes the largest easy to spot.
Execute
Review
Mount Rainier leads with a combined total of 16. All four totals sum to 47, matching 23+24, so the data is accounted for.
Draw a single combined bar graph (Draw a Diagram): the tallest bar is Mount Rainier, giving the same choice without writing the sums.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Combining the two tables and comparing category counts to find the largest.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Adding category counts and checking against the total of 47.
Ms. Reed's class and Mr. Diaz's class were each surveyed about which mountain they want to visit, and the results are shown in the tables below. If the two classes go on the field trip together, which mountain should they choose?
Ms. Reed's class
| Mountain | Pine Ridge | Eagle Peak | Mount Rainier | Cedar Butte | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 3 | 3 | 9 | 4 | 19 |
Mr. Diaz's class
| Mountain | Pine Ridge | Eagle Peak | Mount Rainier | Cedar Butte | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 2 | 6 | 5 | 1 | 14 |
Show solution
Understand
Two classes each voted for a mountain to visit. To pick one mountain for both classes together, we add each mountain's votes across the two classes and choose the mountain with the most total votes.
- Ms. Reed's class: Pine Ridge 3, Eagle Peak 3, Mount Rainier 9, Cedar Butte 4 (total 19).
- Mr. Diaz's class: Pine Ridge 2, Eagle Peak 6, Mount Rainier 5, Cedar Butte 1 (total 14).
- The two classes go together, so their votes should be combined.
- Which single mountain the combined classes should choose.
- The best choice is the mountain with the greatest combined number of votes.
Plan
#15 Organize Information in More Ways · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List
Merging the two separate tables into one combined frequency table (re-organizing the data) lets us compare totals. Listing each mountain's combined count makes the largest easy to spot.
Execute
Review
Mount Rainier leads with a combined total of 14. All four totals sum to 33, matching 19+14, so the data is accounted for.
Draw a single combined bar graph (Draw a Diagram): the tallest bar is Mount Rainier, giving the same choice without writing the sums.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Combining the two tables and comparing category counts to find the largest.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Adding category counts and checking against the total of 33.
Ms. Reed's class and Mr. Diaz's class were each surveyed about which mountain they want to visit, and the results are shown in the tables below. If the two classes go on the field trip together, which mountain should they choose?
Ms. Reed's class
| Mountain | Blue Lake | Red Canyon | Green Valley | Gold Mesa | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 5 | 2 | 6 | 8 | 21 |
Mr. Diaz's class
| Mountain | Blue Lake | Red Canyon | Green Valley | Gold Mesa | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 1 | 4 | 3 | 7 | 15 |
Show solution
Understand
Two classes each voted for a mountain to visit. To pick one mountain for both classes together, we add each mountain's votes across the two classes and choose the mountain with the most total votes.
- Ms. Reed's class: Blue Lake 5, Red Canyon 2, Green Valley 6, Gold Mesa 8 (total 21).
- Mr. Diaz's class: Blue Lake 1, Red Canyon 4, Green Valley 3, Gold Mesa 7 (total 15).
- The two classes go together, so their votes should be combined.
- Which single mountain the combined classes should choose.
- The best choice is the mountain with the greatest combined number of votes.
Plan
#15 Organize Information in More Ways · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List
Merging the two separate tables into one combined frequency table (re-organizing the data) lets us compare totals. Listing each mountain's combined count makes the largest easy to spot.
Execute
Review
Gold Mesa leads with a combined total of 15. All four totals sum to 36, matching 21+15, so the data is accounted for.
Draw a single combined bar graph (Draw a Diagram): the tallest bar is Gold Mesa, giving the same choice without writing the sums.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Combining the two tables and comparing category counts to find the largest.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Adding category counts and checking against the total of 36.
Ms. Reed's class and Mr. Diaz's class were each surveyed about which mountain they want to visit, and the results are shown in the tables below. If the two classes go on the field trip together, which mountain should they choose?
Ms. Reed's class
| Mountain | Blue Lake | Red Canyon | Green Valley | Gold Mesa | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 2 | 5 | 7 | 3 | 17 |
Mr. Diaz's class
| Mountain | Blue Lake | Red Canyon | Green Valley | Gold Mesa | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 6 | 1 | 9 | 4 | 20 |
Show solution
Understand
Two classes each voted for a mountain to visit. To pick one mountain for both classes together, we add each mountain's votes across the two classes and choose the mountain with the most total votes.
- Ms. Reed's class: Blue Lake 2, Red Canyon 5, Green Valley 7, Gold Mesa 3 (total 17).
- Mr. Diaz's class: Blue Lake 6, Red Canyon 1, Green Valley 9, Gold Mesa 4 (total 20).
- The two classes go together, so their votes should be combined.
- Which single mountain the combined classes should choose.
- The best choice is the mountain with the greatest combined number of votes.
Plan
#15 Organize Information in More Ways · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List
Merging the two separate tables into one combined frequency table (re-organizing the data) lets us compare totals. Listing each mountain's combined count makes the largest easy to spot.
Execute
Review
Green Valley leads with a combined total of 16. All four totals sum to 37, matching 17+20, so the data is accounted for.
Draw a single combined bar graph (Draw a Diagram): the tallest bar is Green Valley, giving the same choice without writing the sums.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Combining the two tables and comparing category counts to find the largest.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Adding category counts and checking against the total of 37.
Ms. Reed's class and Mr. Diaz's class were each surveyed about which mountain they want to visit, and the results are shown in the tables below. If the two classes go on the field trip together, which mountain should they choose?
Ms. Reed's class
| Mountain | Pine Ridge | Eagle Peak | Mount Rainier | Cedar Butte | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 4 | 6 | 1 | 9 | 20 |
Mr. Diaz's class
| Mountain | Pine Ridge | Eagle Peak | Mount Rainier | Cedar Butte | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 3 | 2 | 5 | 8 | 18 |
Show solution
Understand
Two classes each voted for a mountain to visit. To pick one mountain for both classes together, we add each mountain's votes across the two classes and choose the mountain with the most total votes.
- Ms. Reed's class: Pine Ridge 4, Eagle Peak 6, Mount Rainier 1, Cedar Butte 9 (total 20).
- Mr. Diaz's class: Pine Ridge 3, Eagle Peak 2, Mount Rainier 5, Cedar Butte 8 (total 18).
- The two classes go together, so their votes should be combined.
- Which single mountain the combined classes should choose.
- The best choice is the mountain with the greatest combined number of votes.
Plan
#15 Organize Information in More Ways · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List
Merging the two separate tables into one combined frequency table (re-organizing the data) lets us compare totals. Listing each mountain's combined count makes the largest easy to spot.
Execute
Review
Cedar Butte leads with a combined total of 17. All four totals sum to 38, matching 20+18, so the data is accounted for.
Draw a single combined bar graph (Draw a Diagram): the tallest bar is Cedar Butte, giving the same choice without writing the sums.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Combining the two tables and comparing category counts to find the largest.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Adding category counts and checking against the total of 38.
Ms. Reed's class and Mr. Diaz's class were each surveyed about which mountain they want to visit, and the results are shown in the tables below. If the two classes go on the field trip together, which mountain should they choose?
Ms. Reed's class
| Mountain | Blue Lake | Red Canyon | Green Valley | Gold Mesa | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 9 | 3 | 4 | 2 | 18 |
Mr. Diaz's class
| Mountain | Blue Lake | Red Canyon | Green Valley | Gold Mesa | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 7 | 1 | 5 | 6 | 19 |
Show solution
Understand
Two classes each voted for a mountain to visit. To pick one mountain for both classes together, we add each mountain's votes across the two classes and choose the mountain with the most total votes.
- Ms. Reed's class: Blue Lake 9, Red Canyon 3, Green Valley 4, Gold Mesa 2 (total 18).
- Mr. Diaz's class: Blue Lake 7, Red Canyon 1, Green Valley 5, Gold Mesa 6 (total 19).
- The two classes go together, so their votes should be combined.
- Which single mountain the combined classes should choose.
- The best choice is the mountain with the greatest combined number of votes.
Plan
#15 Organize Information in More Ways · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List
Merging the two separate tables into one combined frequency table (re-organizing the data) lets us compare totals. Listing each mountain's combined count makes the largest easy to spot.
Execute
Review
Blue Lake leads with a combined total of 16. All four totals sum to 37, matching 18+19, so the data is accounted for.
Draw a single combined bar graph (Draw a Diagram): the tallest bar is Blue Lake, giving the same choice without writing the sums.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Combining the two tables and comparing category counts to find the largest.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Adding category counts and checking against the total of 37.
Ms. Reed's class and Mr. Diaz's class were each surveyed about which mountain they want to visit, and the results are shown in the tables below. If the two classes go on the field trip together, which mountain should they choose?
Ms. Reed's class
| Mountain | Pine Ridge | Eagle Peak | Mount Rainier | Cedar Butte | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 9 | 2 | 4 | 6 | 21 |
Mr. Diaz's class
| Mountain | Pine Ridge | Eagle Peak | Mount Rainier | Cedar Butte | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 3 | 5 | 1 | 7 | 16 |
Show solution
Understand
Two classes each voted for a mountain to visit. To pick one mountain for both classes together, we add each mountain's votes across the two classes and choose the mountain with the most total votes.
- Ms. Reed's class: Pine Ridge 9, Eagle Peak 2, Mount Rainier 4, Cedar Butte 6 (total 21).
- Mr. Diaz's class: Pine Ridge 3, Eagle Peak 5, Mount Rainier 1, Cedar Butte 7 (total 16).
- The two classes go together, so their votes should be combined.
- Which single mountain the combined classes should choose.
- The best choice is the mountain with the greatest combined number of votes.
Plan
#15 Organize Information in More Ways · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List
Merging the two separate tables into one combined frequency table (re-organizing the data) lets us compare totals. Listing each mountain's combined count makes the largest easy to spot.
Execute
Review
Cedar Butte leads with a combined total of 13. All four totals sum to 37, matching 21+16, so the data is accounted for.
Draw a single combined bar graph (Draw a Diagram): the tallest bar is Cedar Butte, giving the same choice without writing the sums.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Combining the two tables and comparing category counts to find the largest.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Adding category counts and checking against the total of 37.
Ms. Reed's class and Mr. Diaz's class were each surveyed about which mountain they want to visit, and the results are shown in the tables below. If the two classes go on the field trip together, which mountain should they choose?
Ms. Reed's class
| Mountain | Blue Lake | Red Canyon | Green Valley | Gold Mesa | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 7 | 1 | 3 | 4 | 15 |
Mr. Diaz's class
| Mountain | Blue Lake | Red Canyon | Green Valley | Gold Mesa | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 8 | 2 | 5 | 0 | 15 |
Show solution
Understand
Two classes each voted for a mountain to visit. To pick one mountain for both classes together, we add each mountain's votes across the two classes and choose the mountain with the most total votes.
- Ms. Reed's class: Blue Lake 7, Red Canyon 1, Green Valley 3, Gold Mesa 4 (total 15).
- Mr. Diaz's class: Blue Lake 8, Red Canyon 2, Green Valley 5, Gold Mesa 0 (total 15).
- The two classes go together, so their votes should be combined.
- Which single mountain the combined classes should choose.
- The best choice is the mountain with the greatest combined number of votes.
Plan
#15 Organize Information in More Ways · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List
Merging the two separate tables into one combined frequency table (re-organizing the data) lets us compare totals. Listing each mountain's combined count makes the largest easy to spot.
Execute
Review
Blue Lake leads with a combined total of 15. All four totals sum to 30, matching 15+15, so the data is accounted for.
Draw a single combined bar graph (Draw a Diagram): the tallest bar is Blue Lake, giving the same choice without writing the sums.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Combining the two tables and comparing category counts to find the largest.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Adding category counts and checking against the total of 30.
Ms. Reed's class and Mr. Diaz's class were each surveyed about which mountain they want to visit, and the results are shown in the tables below. If the two classes go on the field trip together, which mountain should they choose?
Ms. Reed's class
| Mountain | Pine Ridge | Eagle Peak | Mount Rainier | Cedar Butte | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 2 | 7 | 3 | 5 | 17 |
Mr. Diaz's class
| Mountain | Pine Ridge | Eagle Peak | Mount Rainier | Cedar Butte | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 4 | 8 | 2 | 1 | 15 |
Show solution
Understand
Two classes each voted for a mountain to visit. To pick one mountain for both classes together, we add each mountain's votes across the two classes and choose the mountain with the most total votes.
- Ms. Reed's class: Pine Ridge 2, Eagle Peak 7, Mount Rainier 3, Cedar Butte 5 (total 17).
- Mr. Diaz's class: Pine Ridge 4, Eagle Peak 8, Mount Rainier 2, Cedar Butte 1 (total 15).
- The two classes go together, so their votes should be combined.
- Which single mountain the combined classes should choose.
- The best choice is the mountain with the greatest combined number of votes.
Plan
#15 Organize Information in More Ways · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List
Merging the two separate tables into one combined frequency table (re-organizing the data) lets us compare totals. Listing each mountain's combined count makes the largest easy to spot.
Execute
Review
Eagle Peak leads with a combined total of 15. All four totals sum to 32, matching 17+15, so the data is accounted for.
Draw a single combined bar graph (Draw a Diagram): the tallest bar is Eagle Peak, giving the same choice without writing the sums.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Combining the two tables and comparing category counts to find the largest.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Adding category counts and checking against the total of 32.
Ms. Reed's class and Mr. Diaz's class were each surveyed about which mountain they want to visit, and the results are shown in the tables below. If the two classes go on the field trip together, which mountain should they choose?
Ms. Reed's class
| Mountain | Pine Ridge | Eagle Peak | Mount Rainier | Cedar Butte | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 6 | 3 | 8 | 2 | 19 |
Mr. Diaz's class
| Mountain | Pine Ridge | Eagle Peak | Mount Rainier | Cedar Butte | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | 5 | 4 | 7 | 6 | 22 |
Show solution
Understand
Two classes each voted for a mountain to visit. To pick one mountain for both classes together, we add each mountain's votes across the two classes and choose the mountain with the most total votes.
- Ms. Reed's class: Pine Ridge 6, Eagle Peak 3, Mount Rainier 8, Cedar Butte 2 (total 19).
- Mr. Diaz's class: Pine Ridge 5, Eagle Peak 4, Mount Rainier 7, Cedar Butte 6 (total 22).
- The two classes go together, so their votes should be combined.
- Which single mountain the combined classes should choose.
- The best choice is the mountain with the greatest combined number of votes.
Plan
#15 Organize Information in More Ways · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List
Merging the two separate tables into one combined frequency table (re-organizing the data) lets us compare totals. Listing each mountain's combined count makes the largest easy to spot.
Execute
Review
Mount Rainier leads with a combined total of 15. All four totals sum to 41, matching 19+22, so the data is accounted for.
Draw a single combined bar graph (Draw a Diagram): the tallest bar is Mount Rainier, giving the same choice without writing the sums.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Combining the two tables and comparing category counts to find the largest.3.OA.D.8Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Adding category counts and checking against the total of 41.