ChatterBank1 min ago
Maths Problem
27 Answers
Apologies if this is the wrong section, but I can't seem to find a more appropriate one.
My Granddaughter has been given the following maths question, which seems to have a mistake in the question. Anyone any comments, please?
There are two bags which contain some prizes. Each bag has the same value.
A large prize is worth £850
A medium prize is worth £500
A small prize is worth £320
The value of mini prize is unknown.
Bag A contains 1 Small, 1 Medium and 1 Mini
Bag B contains 1 Large and 2 Minis
What is a Mini prize worth?
My Granddaughter has been given the following maths question, which seems to have a mistake in the question. Anyone any comments, please?
There are two bags which contain some prizes. Each bag has the same value.
A large prize is worth £850
A medium prize is worth £500
A small prize is worth £320
The value of mini prize is unknown.
Bag A contains 1 Small, 1 Medium and 1 Mini
Bag B contains 1 Large and 2 Minis
What is a Mini prize worth?
Answers
Best Answer
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Bag A = £320 + £500 + 1 mini.
Bag B = £850 + 2 minis.
So, Bag A = £820 plus 1 mini
Bag B = £850 plus 2 minis.
So, let the value of a mini be x. Then
820 + x = 850 + 2x.
Under the above scenario Bag B must be worth more than bag A. They cannot both be of the same value. The only way to get the equation to balance is to make the value of a mini a negative number. Minus 30, in fact, meaning 820 – 30 = 850 – 60.
Clearly nonsense.
Bag A = £320 + £500 + 1 mini.
Bag B = £850 + 2 minis.
So, Bag A = £820 plus 1 mini
Bag B = £850 plus 2 minis.
So, let the value of a mini be x. Then
820 + x = 850 + 2x.
Under the above scenario Bag B must be worth more than bag A. They cannot both be of the same value. The only way to get the equation to balance is to make the value of a mini a negative number. Minus 30, in fact, meaning 820 – 30 = 850 – 60.
Clearly nonsense.
It's perfectly possible that the teacher HASN'T made a mistake.
When I was at school we were often required to copy homework questions down from the blackboard. It was just the same when I was teaching in the 1970s and 80s. I suspect that (apart from the fact that it will now be a whiteboard) things haven't changed very much.
So a simple error by a pupil copying from the whiteboard could be the cause of the problem here.
When I was at school we were often required to copy homework questions down from the blackboard. It was just the same when I was teaching in the 1970s and 80s. I suspect that (apart from the fact that it will now be a whiteboard) things haven't changed very much.
So a simple error by a pupil copying from the whiteboard could be the cause of the problem here.