Mai made 50 flyers for five volunteers in her club to hang up around school. She gave 5 flyers to the first volunteer, 18 flyers to the second volunteer, and divided the remaining flyers equally among the three remaining volunteers.
To thank her five volunteers, Mai gave each of them the same number of stickers. Then she gave them each two more stickers. Altogether, she gave them a total of 30 stickers.
Mai distributed another group of flyers equally among the five volunteers. Then she remembered that she needed some flyers to give to teachers, so she took 2 flyers from each volunteer. That meant the volunteers had a total of 40 flyers to hang up.
2.3
Activity
Student Lesson Summary
Tape diagrams are useful for representing how quantities are related and can help us answer questions about a situation.
Example: A school receives 46 copies of a popular book. The library takes 26 copies and the remainder are split evenly among 4 teachers. How many books does each teacher receive?
This situation involves a total formed by 4 equal parts and one other part. We can represent the situation with a diagram labeled 46 for the total number of books. That total length is divided into parts—one long part labeled 26 for the books given to the library and 4 equal-sized parts for the books split among 4 teachers. We label each of those parts with a variable, , because we don’t know how many books each teacher got. Using the same variable, , in each part means that the same number is represented four times.
Some situations have parts that are all equal, but each part has been increased from an original amount:
Example: A company manufactures a special type of sensor, and packs them in boxes of 4 for shipment. Then a new design increases the weight of each sensor by 9 grams. The new package of 4 sensors weighs 76 grams. How much did each sensor weigh originally?
We can represent this situation with a rectangle representing a total of 76 split into 4 equal parts. Each part shows that the new weight, , is 9 more than the original weight, .
None
Here are three more stories. Draw a tape diagram to represent each story. Then describe how you would find any unknown amounts in the stories.
Noah and his sister are making gift bags for a birthday party. Noah puts 3 pencil erasers in each bag. His sister puts stickers in each bag. After filling 4 bags, they have used a total of 44 items.
Noah’s family also wants to blow up a total of 60 balloons for the party. Yesterday they blew up 24 balloons. Today they want to split the remaining balloons equally between four family members.
Noah’s family has some fruit bars to put in the gift bags. They have one box each of four flavors: apple, strawberry, blueberry, and peach. The boxes all have the same number of bars. The family ate one bar from each box. That left 28 bars for the gift bags.