Largest vertical gap between two line graphs
5.MD.B.2
Generated variants — 8
The line graph shows Emma's and Leo's savings, recorded over time. Find when the difference between their two values is smallest, and find that difference in dollars.
(Figure) A line graph titled "Savings" with both data sets drawn on the same axes. The horizontal axis is week (, , , , ). The vertical axis is in dollars, with major gridlines at , , and each small grid square worth dollars (the lower part of the axis is cut off with a wavy line). Emma's values are , , , , dollars; Leo's values are , , , , dollars.
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Understand
One line graph shows Emma's and Leo's savings at week 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Emma: 30, 45, 55, 70, 80 dollars; Leo: 25, 40, 52, 60, 68 dollars (each small square = 2 dollars). I must find the week where the two values are closest and give that smallest difference.
- Emma's values: 1=30, 2=45, 3=55, 4=70, 5=80 dollars
- Leo's values: 1=25, 2=40, 3=52, 4=60, 5=68 dollars
- Each small grid square = 2 dollars
- Both lines are drawn on the same axes
- The week at which the two values differ the least
- That smallest difference in dollars
- Compare the two lines only at the marked week values
Plan
#2 Make a Systematic List · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
There are only 5 categories, so I list the vertical gap (Emma minus Leo) at each and pick the smallest. On the graph the smallest gap is where the two lines come closest together vertically.
Execute
Review
At week 3 the gap is 3 dollars, and every other category gives a larger gap, so 3 is correctly the closest. Each square is 2 dollars.
Instead of subtracting, read the graph directly (tool 1): scan for where the two lines sit nearest each other vertically, then count the squares between them.
Standards · min grade 5
5.MD.B.2Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading both data sets off one graph and comparing their differences at each category
The line graph shows Mia's and Liam's weights, recorded over time. Find when the difference between their two values is smallest, and find that difference in kg.
(Figure) A line graph titled "Weights" with both data sets drawn on the same axes. The horizontal axis is age (, , , , ). The vertical axis is in kg, with major gridlines at , , and each small grid square worth kg (the lower part of the axis is cut off with a wavy line). Mia's values are , , , , kg; Liam's values are , , , , kg.
Show solution
Understand
One line graph shows Mia's and Liam's weights at age 7, 8, 9, 10, 11. Mia: 24, 26, 27, 32, 30 kg; Liam: 20, 22, 25, 26, 27 kg (each small square = 1 kg). I must find the age where the two values are closest and give that smallest difference.
- Mia's values: 7=24, 8=26, 9=27, 10=32, 11=30 kg
- Liam's values: 7=20, 8=22, 9=25, 10=26, 11=27 kg
- Each small grid square = 1 kg
- Both lines are drawn on the same axes
- The age at which the two values differ the least
- That smallest difference in kg
- Compare the two lines only at the marked age values
Plan
#2 Make a Systematic List · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
There are only 5 categories, so I list the vertical gap (Mia minus Liam) at each and pick the smallest. On the graph the smallest gap is where the two lines come closest together vertically.
Execute
Review
At age 9 the gap is 2 kg, and every other category gives a larger gap, so 9 is correctly the closest. Each square is 1 kg.
Instead of subtracting, read the graph directly (tool 1): scan for where the two lines sit nearest each other vertically, then count the squares between them.
Standards · min grade 5
5.MD.B.2Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading both data sets off one graph and comparing their differences at each category
The line graph shows Ava's and Noah's heights, recorded over time. Find when the difference between their two values is smallest, and find that difference in cm.
(Figure) A line graph titled "Heights" with both data sets drawn on the same axes. The horizontal axis is age (, , , , ). The vertical axis is in cm, with major gridlines at , , and each small grid square worth cm (the lower part of the axis is cut off with a wavy line). Ava's values are , , , , cm; Noah's values are , , , , cm.
Show solution
Understand
One line graph shows Ava's and Noah's heights at age 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. Ava: 110, 118, 124, 130, 138 cm; Noah: 105, 116, 119, 128, 130 cm (each small square = 4 cm). I must find the age where the two values are closest and give that smallest difference.
- Ava's values: 6=110, 7=118, 8=124, 9=130, 10=138 cm
- Noah's values: 6=105, 7=116, 8=119, 9=128, 10=130 cm
- Each small grid square = 4 cm
- Both lines are drawn on the same axes
- The age at which the two values differ the least
- That smallest difference in cm
- Compare the two lines only at the marked age values
Plan
#2 Make a Systematic List · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
There are only 5 categories, so I list the vertical gap (Ava minus Noah) at each and pick the smallest. On the graph the smallest gap is where the two lines come closest together vertically.
Execute
Review
At age 7 the gap is 2 cm, and every other category gives a larger gap, so 7 is correctly the closest. Each square is 4 cm.
Instead of subtracting, read the graph directly (tool 1): scan for where the two lines sit nearest each other vertically, then count the squares between them.
Standards · min grade 5
5.MD.B.2Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading both data sets off one graph and comparing their differences at each category
The line graph shows Town A's and Town B's temperatures, recorded over time. Find when the difference between their two values is smallest, and find that difference in degrees.
(Figure) A line graph titled "Temperatures" with both data sets drawn on the same axes. The horizontal axis is day (, , , , ). The vertical axis is in degrees, with major gridlines at , , and each small grid square worth degrees (the lower part of the axis is cut off with a wavy line). Town A's values are , , , , degrees; Town B's values are , , , , degrees.
Show solution
Understand
One line graph shows Town A's and Town B's temperatures at day 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Town A: 12, 15, 18, 20, 22 degrees; Town B: 10, 14, 15, 19, 21 degrees (each small square = 1 degrees). I must find the day where the two values are closest and give that smallest difference.
- Town A's values: 1=12, 2=15, 3=18, 4=20, 5=22 degrees
- Town B's values: 1=10, 2=14, 3=15, 4=19, 5=21 degrees
- Each small grid square = 1 degrees
- Both lines are drawn on the same axes
- The day at which the two values differ the least
- That smallest difference in degrees
- Compare the two lines only at the marked day values
Plan
#2 Make a Systematic List · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
There are only 5 categories, so I list the vertical gap (Town A minus Town B) at each and pick the smallest. On the graph the smallest gap is where the two lines come closest together vertically.
Execute
Review
At day 2 the gap is 1 degrees, and every other category gives a larger gap, so 2 is correctly the closest. Each square is 1 degrees.
Instead of subtracting, read the graph directly (tool 1): scan for where the two lines sit nearest each other vertically, then count the squares between them.
Standards · min grade 5
5.MD.B.2Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading both data sets off one graph and comparing their differences at each category
The line graph shows Jin's and Rae's steps walked, recorded over time. Find when the difference between their two values is smallest, and find that difference in thousand steps.
(Figure) A line graph titled "Steps Walked" with both data sets drawn on the same axes. The horizontal axis is day (, , , , ). The vertical axis is in thousand steps, with major gridlines at , , and each small grid square worth thousand steps (the lower part of the axis is cut off with a wavy line). Jin's values are , , , , thousand steps; Rae's values are , , , , thousand steps.
Show solution
Understand
One line graph shows Jin's and Rae's steps walked at day 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Jin: 6, 9, 11, 14, 16 thousand steps; Rae: 5, 8, 10, 11, 15 thousand steps (each small square = 2 thousand steps). I must find the day where the two values are closest and give that smallest difference.
- Jin's values: 1=6, 2=9, 3=11, 4=14, 5=16 thousand steps
- Rae's values: 1=5, 2=8, 3=10, 4=11, 5=15 thousand steps
- Each small grid square = 2 thousand steps
- Both lines are drawn on the same axes
- The day at which the two values differ the least
- That smallest difference in thousand steps
- Compare the two lines only at the marked day values
Plan
#2 Make a Systematic List · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
There are only 5 categories, so I list the vertical gap (Jin minus Rae) at each and pick the smallest. On the graph the smallest gap is where the two lines come closest together vertically.
Execute
Review
At day 1 the gap is 1 thousand steps, and every other category gives a larger gap, so 1 is correctly the closest. Each square is 2 thousand steps.
Instead of subtracting, read the graph directly (tool 1): scan for where the two lines sit nearest each other vertically, then count the squares between them.
Standards · min grade 5
5.MD.B.2Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading both data sets off one graph and comparing their differences at each category
The line graph shows Sam's and Kim's weights, recorded over time. Find when the difference between their two values is smallest, and find that difference in kg.
(Figure) A line graph titled "Weights" with both data sets drawn on the same axes. The horizontal axis is age (, , , , ). The vertical axis is in kg, with major gridlines at , , and each small grid square worth kg (the lower part of the axis is cut off with a wavy line). Sam's values are , , , , kg; Kim's values are , , , , kg.
Show solution
Understand
One line graph shows Sam's and Kim's weights at age 8, 9, 10, 11, 12. Sam: 26, 28, 31, 33, 38 kg; Kim: 22, 27, 28, 30, 32 kg (each small square = 2 kg). I must find the age where the two values are closest and give that smallest difference.
- Sam's values: 8=26, 9=28, 10=31, 11=33, 12=38 kg
- Kim's values: 8=22, 9=27, 10=28, 11=30, 12=32 kg
- Each small grid square = 2 kg
- Both lines are drawn on the same axes
- The age at which the two values differ the least
- That smallest difference in kg
- Compare the two lines only at the marked age values
Plan
#2 Make a Systematic List · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
There are only 5 categories, so I list the vertical gap (Sam minus Kim) at each and pick the smallest. On the graph the smallest gap is where the two lines come closest together vertically.
Execute
Review
At age 9 the gap is 1 kg, and every other category gives a larger gap, so 9 is correctly the closest. Each square is 2 kg.
Instead of subtracting, read the graph directly (tool 1): scan for where the two lines sit nearest each other vertically, then count the squares between them.
Standards · min grade 5
5.MD.B.2Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading both data sets off one graph and comparing their differences at each category
The line graph shows Pot A's and Pot B's plant heights, recorded over time. Find when the difference between their two values is smallest, and find that difference in cm.
(Figure) A line graph titled "Plant Heights" with both data sets drawn on the same axes. The horizontal axis is week (, , , , ). The vertical axis is in cm, with major gridlines at , , and each small grid square worth cm (the lower part of the axis is cut off with a wavy line). Pot A's values are , , , , cm; Pot B's values are , , , , cm.
Show solution
Understand
One line graph shows Pot A's and Pot B's plant heights at week 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Pot A: 8, 14, 19, 23, 30 cm; Pot B: 5, 12, 17, 22, 25 cm (each small square = 3 cm). I must find the week where the two values are closest and give that smallest difference.
- Pot A's values: 1=8, 2=14, 3=19, 4=23, 5=30 cm
- Pot B's values: 1=5, 2=12, 3=17, 4=22, 5=25 cm
- Each small grid square = 3 cm
- Both lines are drawn on the same axes
- The week at which the two values differ the least
- That smallest difference in cm
- Compare the two lines only at the marked week values
Plan
#2 Make a Systematic List · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
There are only 5 categories, so I list the vertical gap (Pot A minus Pot B) at each and pick the smallest. On the graph the smallest gap is where the two lines come closest together vertically.
Execute
Review
At week 4 the gap is 1 cm, and every other category gives a larger gap, so 4 is correctly the closest. Each square is 3 cm.
Instead of subtracting, read the graph directly (tool 1): scan for where the two lines sit nearest each other vertically, then count the squares between them.
Standards · min grade 5
5.MD.B.2Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading both data sets off one graph and comparing their differences at each category
The line graph shows Sofia's and Max's reading counts, recorded over time. Find when the difference between their two values is smallest, and find that difference in books.
(Figure) A line graph titled "Reading Counts" with both data sets drawn on the same axes. The horizontal axis is month (, , , , ). The vertical axis is in books, with major gridlines at , , and each small grid square worth books (the lower part of the axis is cut off with a wavy line). Sofia's values are , , , , books; Max's values are , , , , books.
Show solution
Understand
One line graph shows Sofia's and Max's reading counts at month 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Sofia: 4, 7, 9, 12, 14 books; Max: 3, 6, 8, 9, 13 books (each small square = 1 books). I must find the month where the two values are closest and give that smallest difference.
- Sofia's values: 1=4, 2=7, 3=9, 4=12, 5=14 books
- Max's values: 1=3, 2=6, 3=8, 4=9, 5=13 books
- Each small grid square = 1 books
- Both lines are drawn on the same axes
- The month at which the two values differ the least
- That smallest difference in books
- Compare the two lines only at the marked month values
Plan
#2 Make a Systematic List · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
There are only 5 categories, so I list the vertical gap (Sofia minus Max) at each and pick the smallest. On the graph the smallest gap is where the two lines come closest together vertically.
Execute
Review
At month 1 the gap is 1 books, and every other category gives a larger gap, so 1 is correctly the closest. Each square is 1 books.
Instead of subtracting, read the graph directly (tool 1): scan for where the two lines sit nearest each other vertically, then count the squares between them.
Standards · min grade 5
5.MD.B.2Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading both data sets off one graph and comparing their differences at each category