Combine two graphs to find totals
3.MD.B.34.OA.A.3
Generated variants — 8
Mr. Park's class surveyed the number of each snack they bought at the school store and the price of one of each snack. The results are shown in the two bar graphs below. Find how much money the class spent buying bread.
Number of snacks bought (unit: items)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Count |
Price of one snack (unit: dollars)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price |
The data are shown as two bar graphs. The first (horizontal) bar graph shows how many of each snack were bought; the second (vertical) bar graph shows the price of one of each snack in dollars.
Show solution
Understand
Two bar graphs give, for each snack, how many were bought and the price of one snack. We must find the total money spent on bread by combining bread's count with bread's unit price.
- Counts bought: crackers 10, juice 11, bread 13, ice cream 9.
- Prices each: crackers 0.80, bread 1.20.
- We want the money spent on bread only.
- The total amount of money the class spent buying bread.
- Bread count and bread price must come from the same snack.
- Total cost = number bought times price of one.
Plan
#8 Analyze the Units · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems
The two graphs supply different units - items and dollars-per-item - and linking the right values multiplies to dollars. Checking units (items times dollars/item = dollars) confirms the setup, and reading the matching bars is the key subproblem.
Execute
Review
13 bread at about 0.90 = 11.70 is in the right range and the units are dollars.
Identify subproblems / repeated addition (tool 7): add the unit price the right number of times, or split the count into friendlier parts and add the partial costs.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading the count and unit price from the two bar graphs.4.OA.A.3Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Multiplying the count by the unit price to get the total money spent.
Mr. Park's class surveyed the number of each snack they bought at the school store and the price of one of each snack. The results are shown in the two bar graphs below. Find how much money the class spent buying juice.
Number of snacks bought (unit: items)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Count |
Price of one snack (unit: dollars)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price |
The data are shown as two bar graphs. The first (horizontal) bar graph shows how many of each snack were bought; the second (vertical) bar graph shows the price of one of each snack in dollars.
Show solution
Understand
Two bar graphs give, for each snack, how many were bought and the price of one snack. We must find the total money spent on juice by combining juice's count with juice's unit price.
- Counts bought: crackers 20, juice 14, bread 16, ice cream 18.
- Prices each: crackers 0.90, bread 1.30.
- We want the money spent on juice only.
- The total amount of money the class spent buying juice.
- Juice count and juice price must come from the same snack.
- Total cost = number bought times price of one.
Plan
#8 Analyze the Units · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems
The two graphs supply different units - items and dollars-per-item - and linking the right values multiplies to dollars. Checking units (items times dollars/item = dollars) confirms the setup, and reading the matching bars is the key subproblem.
Execute
Review
14 juice at about 0.90 = 12.60 is in the right range and the units are dollars.
Identify subproblems / repeated addition (tool 7): add the unit price the right number of times, or split the count into friendlier parts and add the partial costs.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading the count and unit price from the two bar graphs.4.OA.A.3Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Multiplying the count by the unit price to get the total money spent.
Mr. Park's class surveyed the number of each snack they bought at the school store and the price of one of each snack. The results are shown in the two bar graphs below. Find how much money the class spent buying crackers.
Number of snacks bought (unit: items)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Count |
Price of one snack (unit: dollars)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price |
The data are shown as two bar graphs. The first (horizontal) bar graph shows how many of each snack were bought; the second (vertical) bar graph shows the price of one of each snack in dollars.
Show solution
Understand
Two bar graphs give, for each snack, how many were bought and the price of one snack. We must find the total money spent on crackers by combining crackers's count with crackers's unit price.
- Counts bought: crackers 12, juice 16, bread 10, ice cream 14.
- Prices each: crackers 0.75, bread 0.60.
- We want the money spent on crackers only.
- The total amount of money the class spent buying crackers.
- Crackers count and crackers price must come from the same snack.
- Total cost = number bought times price of one.
Plan
#8 Analyze the Units · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems
The two graphs supply different units - items and dollars-per-item - and linking the right values multiplies to dollars. Checking units (items times dollars/item = dollars) confirms the setup, and reading the matching bars is the key subproblem.
Execute
Review
12 crackers at about 1.10 = 13.20 is in the right range and the units are dollars.
Identify subproblems / repeated addition (tool 7): add the unit price the right number of times, or split the count into friendlier parts and add the partial costs.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading the count and unit price from the two bar graphs.4.OA.A.3Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Multiplying the count by the unit price to get the total money spent.
Mr. Park's class surveyed the number of each snack they bought at the school store and the price of one of each snack. The results are shown in the two bar graphs below. Find how much money the class spent buying bread.
Number of snacks bought (unit: items)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Count |
Price of one snack (unit: dollars)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price |
The data are shown as two bar graphs. The first (horizontal) bar graph shows how many of each snack were bought; the second (vertical) bar graph shows the price of one of each snack in dollars.
Show solution
Understand
Two bar graphs give, for each snack, how many were bought and the price of one snack. We must find the total money spent on bread by combining bread's count with bread's unit price.
- Counts bought: crackers 8, juice 12, bread 10, ice cream 14.
- Prices each: crackers 0.60, bread 1.10.
- We want the money spent on bread only.
- The total amount of money the class spent buying bread.
- Bread count and bread price must come from the same snack.
- Total cost = number bought times price of one.
Plan
#8 Analyze the Units · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems
The two graphs supply different units - items and dollars-per-item - and linking the right values multiplies to dollars. Checking units (items times dollars/item = dollars) confirms the setup, and reading the matching bars is the key subproblem.
Execute
Review
10 bread at about 0.80 = 8.00 is in the right range and the units are dollars.
Identify subproblems / repeated addition (tool 7): add the unit price the right number of times, or split the count into friendlier parts and add the partial costs.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading the count and unit price from the two bar graphs.4.OA.A.3Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Multiplying the count by the unit price to get the total money spent.
Mr. Park's class surveyed the number of each snack they bought at the school store and the price of one of each snack. The results are shown in the two bar graphs below. Find how much money the class spent buying ice cream.
Number of snacks bought (unit: items)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Count |
Price of one snack (unit: dollars)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price |
The data are shown as two bar graphs. The first (horizontal) bar graph shows how many of each snack were bought; the second (vertical) bar graph shows the price of one of each snack in dollars.
Show solution
Understand
Two bar graphs give, for each snack, how many were bought and the price of one snack. We must find the total money spent on ice cream by combining ice cream's count with ice cream's unit price.
- Counts bought: crackers 7, juice 13, bread 16, ice cream 11.
- Prices each: crackers 0.70, bread 1.40.
- We want the money spent on ice cream only.
- The total amount of money the class spent buying ice cream.
- Ice cream count and ice cream price must come from the same snack.
- Total cost = number bought times price of one.
Plan
#8 Analyze the Units · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems
The two graphs supply different units - items and dollars-per-item - and linking the right values multiplies to dollars. Checking units (items times dollars/item = dollars) confirms the setup, and reading the matching bars is the key subproblem.
Execute
Review
11 ice cream at about 1.40 = 15.40 is in the right range and the units are dollars.
Identify subproblems / repeated addition (tool 7): add the unit price the right number of times, or split the count into friendlier parts and add the partial costs.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading the count and unit price from the two bar graphs.4.OA.A.3Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Multiplying the count by the unit price to get the total money spent.
Mr. Park's class surveyed the number of each snack they bought at the school store and the price of one of each snack. The results are shown in the two bar graphs below. Find how much money the class spent buying ice cream.
Number of snacks bought (unit: items)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Count |
Price of one snack (unit: dollars)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price |
The data are shown as two bar graphs. The first (horizontal) bar graph shows how many of each snack were bought; the second (vertical) bar graph shows the price of one of each snack in dollars.
Show solution
Understand
Two bar graphs give, for each snack, how many were bought and the price of one snack. We must find the total money spent on ice cream by combining ice cream's count with ice cream's unit price.
- Counts bought: crackers 6, juice 9, bread 12, ice cream 15.
- Prices each: crackers 0.70, bread 1.00.
- We want the money spent on ice cream only.
- The total amount of money the class spent buying ice cream.
- Ice cream count and ice cream price must come from the same snack.
- Total cost = number bought times price of one.
Plan
#8 Analyze the Units · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems
The two graphs supply different units - items and dollars-per-item - and linking the right values multiplies to dollars. Checking units (items times dollars/item = dollars) confirms the setup, and reading the matching bars is the key subproblem.
Execute
Review
15 ice cream at about 1.00 = 15.00 is in the right range and the units are dollars.
Identify subproblems / repeated addition (tool 7): add the unit price the right number of times, or split the count into friendlier parts and add the partial costs.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading the count and unit price from the two bar graphs.4.OA.A.3Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Multiplying the count by the unit price to get the total money spent.
Mr. Park's class surveyed the number of each snack they bought at the school store and the price of one of each snack. The results are shown in the two bar graphs below. Find how much money the class spent buying bread.
Number of snacks bought (unit: items)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Count |
Price of one snack (unit: dollars)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price |
The data are shown as two bar graphs. The first (horizontal) bar graph shows how many of each snack were bought; the second (vertical) bar graph shows the price of one of each snack in dollars.
Show solution
Understand
Two bar graphs give, for each snack, how many were bought and the price of one snack. We must find the total money spent on bread by combining bread's count with bread's unit price.
- Counts bought: crackers 12, juice 14, bread 16, ice cream 10.
- Prices each: crackers 0.80, bread 1.20.
- We want the money spent on bread only.
- The total amount of money the class spent buying bread.
- Bread count and bread price must come from the same snack.
- Total cost = number bought times price of one.
Plan
#8 Analyze the Units · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems
The two graphs supply different units - items and dollars-per-item - and linking the right values multiplies to dollars. Checking units (items times dollars/item = dollars) confirms the setup, and reading the matching bars is the key subproblem.
Execute
Review
16 bread at about 0.70 = 11.20 is in the right range and the units are dollars.
Identify subproblems / repeated addition (tool 7): add the unit price the right number of times, or split the count into friendlier parts and add the partial costs.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading the count and unit price from the two bar graphs.4.OA.A.3Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Multiplying the count by the unit price to get the total money spent.
Mr. Park's class surveyed the number of each snack they bought at the school store and the price of one of each snack. The results are shown in the two bar graphs below. Find how much money the class spent buying crackers.
Number of snacks bought (unit: items)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Count |
Price of one snack (unit: dollars)
| Snack | Crackers | Juice | Bread | Ice cream |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price |
The data are shown as two bar graphs. The first (horizontal) bar graph shows how many of each snack were bought; the second (vertical) bar graph shows the price of one of each snack in dollars.
Show solution
Understand
Two bar graphs give, for each snack, how many were bought and the price of one snack. We must find the total money spent on crackers by combining crackers's count with crackers's unit price.
- Counts bought: crackers 15, juice 10, bread 12, ice cream 8.
- Prices each: crackers 1.00, bread 0.90.
- We want the money spent on crackers only.
- The total amount of money the class spent buying crackers.
- Crackers count and crackers price must come from the same snack.
- Total cost = number bought times price of one.
Plan
#8 Analyze the Units · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems
The two graphs supply different units - items and dollars-per-item - and linking the right values multiplies to dollars. Checking units (items times dollars/item = dollars) confirms the setup, and reading the matching bars is the key subproblem.
Execute
Review
15 crackers at about 1.20 = 18.00 is in the right range and the units are dollars.
Identify subproblems / repeated addition (tool 7): add the unit price the right number of times, or split the count into friendlier parts and add the partial costs.
Standards · min grade 4
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading the count and unit price from the two bar graphs.4.OA.A.3Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Multiplying the count by the unit price to get the total money spent.