Sensim Math · Depth 한국어

← 4-1 · Use total and clues to fill missing bars · Solve a Table or Graph Step by Step from Clues

Use total and clues to fill missing bars · 8 practice problems

3.MD.B.34.OA.A.3

Generated variants — 8

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

Variant 1 answer: Town B has 45 people

The populations of two towns are being shown in a bar graph. Town A has a population of 8080 people. Town B's population is 55 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 00, 4040, and 8080. The horizontal axis lists Town A and Town B. Town A's bar is drawn up to 8080, and Town B's bar is still empty.

Population by Town 0 40 80 People Town A Town B
Show solution

Understand

A bar graph compares two towns' populations. Town A is 80 people. Town B is 5 more than half of Town A. Find Town B's population so its bar can be drawn.

Givens
  • Town A population = 80 people
  • Town B = 5 more than half of Town A's population
  • Gridlines are marked at 0, 40, and 80
Unknowns
  • Town B's population
  • The height of Town B's bar
Constraints
  • Half of Town A must be computed before adding 5
  • The bar height matches the population on the same scale as Town A

Plan

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

The phrase '5 more than half of Town A' breaks into two ordered subproblems: first take half of 80, then add 5. Order matters, so we build the value step by step.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
Town A has 80 people, so first find half of 80.
80÷2=4080 \div 2 = 40
Taking half of a number is dividing it into 2 equal parts.
#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
Town B is 5 more than that, so add 5 to 40.
40+5=4540 + 5 = 45
'5 more than' means we increase the previous result by 5.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Town B's bar reaches 45, on the same scale as Town A.
0<45<800 < 45 < 80
On the same scale, a value of 45 sits at the matching height.
Answer: Town B has 45 people

Review

45 is 5 more than half of 80 (which is 40), so the bar height is sensible on the 80-scale.

Work backwards (tool 11): if Town B were exactly half of Town A it would be 40; the extra '5 more' nudges it to 45.

Standards · min grade 4

  • 4.OA.A.3 Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Taking half of Town A and then adding 5 to find Town B
  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Placing Town B's bar at the correct height on the population scale
💡 This only needs Grade 4 'do it in order' thinking: divide first, then add!
Variant 2 answer: Town B has 21 people

The populations of two towns are being shown in a bar graph. Town A has a population of 100100 people. Town B's population is 11 more than a fifth 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 00, 5050, and 100100. The horizontal axis lists Town A and Town B. Town A's bar is drawn up to 100100, and Town B's bar is still empty.

Population by Town 0 50 100 People Town A Town B
Show solution

Understand

A bar graph compares two towns' populations. Town A is 100 people. Town B is 1 more than a fifth of Town A. Find Town B's population so its bar can be drawn.

Givens
  • Town A population = 100 people
  • Town B = 1 more than a fifth of Town A's population
  • Gridlines are marked at 0, 50, and 100
Unknowns
  • Town B's population
  • The height of Town B's bar
Constraints
  • A fifth of Town A must be computed before adding 1
  • The bar height matches the population on the same scale as Town A

Plan

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

The phrase '1 more than a fifth of Town A' breaks into two ordered subproblems: first take a fifth of 100, then add 1. Order matters, so we build the value step by step.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
Town A has 100 people, so first find a fifth of 100.
100÷5=20100 \div 5 = 20
Taking a fifth of a number is dividing it into 5 equal parts.
#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
Town B is 1 more than that, so add 1 to 20.
20+1=2120 + 1 = 21
'1 more than' means we increase the previous result by 1.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Town B's bar reaches 21, on the same scale as Town A.
0<21<1000 < 21 < 100
On the same scale, a value of 21 sits at the matching height.
Answer: Town B has 21 people

Review

21 is 1 more than a fifth of 100 (which is 20), so the bar height is sensible on the 100-scale.

Work backwards (tool 11): if Town B were exactly a fifth of Town A it would be 20; the extra '1 more' nudges it to 21.

Standards · min grade 4

  • 4.OA.A.3 Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Taking a fifth of Town A and then adding 1 to find Town B
  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Placing Town B's bar at the correct height on the population scale
💡 This only needs Grade 4 'do it in order' thinking: divide first, then add!
Variant 3 answer: Town B has 12 people

The populations of two towns are being shown in a bar graph. Town A has a population of 5050 people. Town B's population is 22 more than a fifth 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 00, 2525, and 5050. The horizontal axis lists Town A and Town B. Town A's bar is drawn up to 5050, and Town B's bar is still empty.

Population by Town 0 25 50 People Town A Town B
Show solution

Understand

A bar graph compares two towns' populations. Town A is 50 people. Town B is 2 more than a fifth of Town A. Find Town B's population so its bar can be drawn.

Givens
  • Town A population = 50 people
  • Town B = 2 more than a fifth of Town A's population
  • Gridlines are marked at 0, 25, and 50
Unknowns
  • Town B's population
  • The height of Town B's bar
Constraints
  • A fifth of Town A must be computed before adding 2
  • The bar height matches the population on the same scale as Town A

Plan

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

The phrase '2 more than a fifth of Town A' breaks into two ordered subproblems: first take a fifth of 50, then add 2. Order matters, so we build the value step by step.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
Town A has 50 people, so first find a fifth of 50.
50÷5=1050 \div 5 = 10
Taking a fifth of a number is dividing it into 5 equal parts.
#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
Town B is 2 more than that, so add 2 to 10.
10+2=1210 + 2 = 12
'2 more than' means we increase the previous result by 2.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Town B's bar reaches 12, on the same scale as Town A.
0<12<500 < 12 < 50
On the same scale, a value of 12 sits at the matching height.
Answer: Town B has 12 people

Review

12 is 2 more than a fifth of 50 (which is 10), so the bar height is sensible on the 50-scale.

Work backwards (tool 11): if Town B were exactly a fifth of Town A it would be 10; the extra '2 more' nudges it to 12.

Standards · min grade 4

  • 4.OA.A.3 Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Taking a fifth of Town A and then adding 2 to find Town B
  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Placing Town B's bar at the correct height on the population scale
💡 This only needs Grade 4 'do it in order' thinking: divide first, then add!
Variant 4 answer: Town B has 35 people

The populations of two towns are being shown in a bar graph. Town A has a population of 100100 people. Town B's population is 1010 more than a quarter 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 00, 5050, and 100100. The horizontal axis lists Town A and Town B. Town A's bar is drawn up to 100100, and Town B's bar is still empty.

Population by Town 0 50 100 People Town A Town B
Show solution

Understand

A bar graph compares two towns' populations. Town A is 100 people. Town B is 10 more than a quarter of Town A. Find Town B's population so its bar can be drawn.

Givens
  • Town A population = 100 people
  • Town B = 10 more than a quarter of Town A's population
  • Gridlines are marked at 0, 50, and 100
Unknowns
  • Town B's population
  • The height of Town B's bar
Constraints
  • A quarter of Town A must be computed before adding 10
  • The bar height matches the population on the same scale as Town A

Plan

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

The phrase '10 more than a quarter of Town A' breaks into two ordered subproblems: first take a quarter of 100, then add 10. Order matters, so we build the value step by step.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
Town A has 100 people, so first find a quarter of 100.
100÷4=25100 \div 4 = 25
Taking a quarter of a number is dividing it into 4 equal parts.
#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
Town B is 10 more than that, so add 10 to 25.
25+10=3525 + 10 = 35
'10 more than' means we increase the previous result by 10.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Town B's bar reaches 35, on the same scale as Town A.
0<35<1000 < 35 < 100
On the same scale, a value of 35 sits at the matching height.
Answer: Town B has 35 people

Review

35 is 10 more than a quarter of 100 (which is 25), so the bar height is sensible on the 100-scale.

Work backwards (tool 11): if Town B were exactly a quarter of Town A it would be 25; the extra '10 more' nudges it to 35.

Standards · min grade 4

  • 4.OA.A.3 Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Taking a quarter of Town A and then adding 10 to find Town B
  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Placing Town B's bar at the correct height on the population scale
💡 This only needs Grade 4 'do it in order' thinking: divide first, then add!
Variant 5 answer: South Town has 36 people

The populations of two towns are being shown in a bar graph. North Town has a population of 9090 people. South Town's population is 66 more than a third of North Town's population.

Find South Town's population, then draw the bar for South Town to complete the graph.

The vertical axis shows population (number of people), with gridlines marked at 00, 4545, and 9090. The horizontal axis lists North Town and South Town. North Town's bar is drawn up to 9090, and South Town's bar is still empty.

Population by Town 0 45 90 People North Town South Town
Show solution

Understand

A bar graph compares two towns' populations. North Town is 90 people. South Town is 6 more than a third of North Town. Find South Town's population so its bar can be drawn.

Givens
  • North Town population = 90 people
  • South Town = 6 more than a third of North Town's population
  • Gridlines are marked at 0, 45, and 90
Unknowns
  • South Town's population
  • The height of South Town's bar
Constraints
  • A third of North Town must be computed before adding 6
  • The bar height matches the population on the same scale as North Town

Plan

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

The phrase '6 more than a third of North Town' breaks into two ordered subproblems: first take a third of 90, then add 6. Order matters, so we build the value step by step.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
North Town has 90 people, so first find a third of 90.
90÷3=3090 \div 3 = 30
Taking a third of a number is dividing it into 3 equal parts.
#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
South Town is 6 more than that, so add 6 to 30.
30+6=3630 + 6 = 36
'6 more than' means we increase the previous result by 6.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
South Town's bar reaches 36, on the same scale as North Town.
0<36<900 < 36 < 90
On the same scale, a value of 36 sits at the matching height.
Answer: South Town has 36 people

Review

36 is 6 more than a third of 90 (which is 30), so the bar height is sensible on the 90-scale.

Work backwards (tool 11): if South Town were exactly a third of North Town it would be 30; the extra '6 more' nudges it to 36.

Standards · min grade 4

  • 4.OA.A.3 Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Taking a third of North Town and then adding 6 to find South Town
  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Placing South Town's bar at the correct height on the population scale
💡 This only needs Grade 4 'do it in order' thinking: divide first, then add!
Variant 6 answer: Town B has 27 people

The populations of two towns are being shown in a bar graph. Town A has a population of 4040 people. Town B's population is 77 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 00, 2020, and 4040. The horizontal axis lists Town A and Town B. Town A's bar is drawn up to 4040, and Town B's bar is still empty.

Population by Town 0 20 40 People Town A Town B
Show solution

Understand

A bar graph compares two towns' populations. Town A is 40 people. Town B is 7 more than half of Town A. Find Town B's population so its bar can be drawn.

Givens
  • Town A population = 40 people
  • Town B = 7 more than half of Town A's population
  • Gridlines are marked at 0, 20, and 40
Unknowns
  • Town B's population
  • The height of Town B's bar
Constraints
  • Half of Town A must be computed before adding 7
  • The bar height matches the population on the same scale as Town A

Plan

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

The phrase '7 more than half of Town A' breaks into two ordered subproblems: first take half of 40, then add 7. Order matters, so we build the value step by step.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
Town A has 40 people, so first find half of 40.
40÷2=2040 \div 2 = 20
Taking half of a number is dividing it into 2 equal parts.
#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
Town B is 7 more than that, so add 7 to 20.
20+7=2720 + 7 = 27
'7 more than' means we increase the previous result by 7.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Town B's bar reaches 27, on the same scale as Town A.
0<27<400 < 27 < 40
On the same scale, a value of 27 sits at the matching height.
Answer: Town B has 27 people

Review

27 is 7 more than half of 40 (which is 20), so the bar height is sensible on the 40-scale.

Work backwards (tool 11): if Town B were exactly half of Town A it would be 20; the extra '7 more' nudges it to 27.

Standards · min grade 4

  • 4.OA.A.3 Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Taking half of Town A and then adding 7 to find Town B
  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Placing Town B's bar at the correct height on the population scale
💡 This only needs Grade 4 'do it in order' thinking: divide first, then add!
Variant 7 answer: Town B has 53 people

The populations of two towns are being shown in a bar graph. Town A has a population of 100100 people. Town B's population is 33 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 00, 5050, and 100100. The horizontal axis lists Town A and Town B. Town A's bar is drawn up to 100100, and Town B's bar is still empty.

Population by Town 0 50 100 People Town A Town B
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.

Givens
  • Town A population = 100 people
  • Town B = 3 more than half of Town A's population
  • Gridlines are marked at 0, 50, and 100
Unknowns
  • Town B's population
  • The height of Town B's bar
Constraints
  • 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 take half of 100, then add 3. Order matters, so we build the value step by step.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
Town A has 100 people, so first find half of 100.
100÷2=50100 \div 2 = 50
Taking half of a number is dividing it into 2 equal parts.
#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
Town B is 3 more than that, so add 3 to 50.
50+3=5350 + 3 = 53
'3 more than' means we increase the previous result by 3.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Town B's bar reaches 53, on the same scale as Town A.
0<53<1000 < 53 < 100
On the same scale, a value of 53 sits at the matching height.
Answer: Town B has 53 people

Review

53 is 3 more than half of 100 (which is 50), so the bar height is sensible on the 100-scale.

Work backwards (tool 11): if Town B were exactly half of Town A it would be 50; the extra '3 more' nudges it to 53.

Standards · min grade 4

  • 4.OA.A.3 Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Taking half of Town A and then adding 3 to find Town B
  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Placing Town B's bar at the correct height on the population scale
💡 This only needs Grade 4 'do it in order' thinking: divide first, then add!
Variant 8 answer: Village B has 24 people

The populations of two towns are being shown in a bar graph. Village A has a population of 6060 people. Village B's population is 44 more than a third of Village A's population.

Find Village B's population, then draw the bar for Village B to complete the graph.

The vertical axis shows population (number of people), with gridlines marked at 00, 3030, and 6060. The horizontal axis lists Village A and Village B. Village A's bar is drawn up to 6060, and Village B's bar is still empty.

Population by Town 0 30 60 People Village A Village B
Show solution

Understand

A bar graph compares two towns' populations. Village A is 60 people. Village B is 4 more than a third of Village A. Find Village B's population so its bar can be drawn.

Givens
  • Village A population = 60 people
  • Village B = 4 more than a third of Village A's population
  • Gridlines are marked at 0, 30, and 60
Unknowns
  • Village B's population
  • The height of Village B's bar
Constraints
  • A third of Village A must be computed before adding 4
  • The bar height matches the population on the same scale as Village A

Plan

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

The phrase '4 more than a third of Village A' breaks into two ordered subproblems: first take a third of 60, then add 4. Order matters, so we build the value step by step.

Execute

#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
Village A has 60 people, so first find a third of 60.
60÷3=2060 \div 3 = 20
Taking a third of a number is dividing it into 3 equal parts.
#7 Identify Subproblems 4.OA.A.3
Village B is 4 more than that, so add 4 to 20.
20+4=2420 + 4 = 24
'4 more than' means we increase the previous result by 4.
#7 Identify Subproblems 3.MD.B.3
Village B's bar reaches 24, on the same scale as Village A.
0<24<600 < 24 < 60
On the same scale, a value of 24 sits at the matching height.
Answer: Village B has 24 people

Review

24 is 4 more than a third of 60 (which is 20), so the bar height is sensible on the 60-scale.

Work backwards (tool 11): if Village B were exactly a third of Village A it would be 20; the extra '4 more' nudges it to 24.

Standards · min grade 4

  • 4.OA.A.3 Solve multi-step word problems using four operations with whole numbers — Taking a third of Village A and then adding 4 to find Village B
  • 3.MD.B.3 Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Placing Village B's bar at the correct height on the population scale
💡 This only needs Grade 4 'do it in order' thinking: divide first, then add!