I think that US Math Textbooks are the best. I routinely send it back to my home country for my nieces and nephews. Unfortunately - the way Math is taught -without textbooks - and in a random selection of units - it makes it harder for anyone to understand the concepts. Pick a textbook and stick with the way the chapters have been organized. Share the textbooks with the parents as well. Make kids either have 1) a copy of the textbook at home or 2) Ask them to keep it in the backpack. |
And they do. But not in third grade math. Which is why one appropriate way for third graders to solve this problem is through guess-and-check. |
You don't need to use any negative numbers.
D+M =96 M+k=93 So D+M+M+k= 96+93 And you know D+k=81 So substitute M+M +81 =189 M+M=108 M=54 |
Thanks. 9:50's version easier to follow for a kid I think. |
Please do not teach algebra to a 3rd grader. You will cause more harm than good.
Let them guess and check, then refine their answer. Understanding what they need to find is the biggest achievement. |
Pp here- I forgot to add you can solve this problem using a singapore math bar modeling approach without using algebra based on the solution I just wrote.
--------- ------------189 D+M. M+k -------------------189 81 M+M. ---------108 M +M M=54 |
I understand this better than multiplying by the -1! |
I love love love the Singapore Math bar modeling approach. |
This is the engineer who solved the problem using algebra. My husband solved it differently; he feels the problem is more "logic" than math.
Add the totals up: D + K = 81 D + M = 96 K + M = 93 ---------------- = 270 Since each kid is double counted above, divide by 2 to find the total number of cards. Once you have the total, subtract out the known amounts above to find the missing amount: D + K + M = 135 We already know that D + K = 81 So subtract 135 - 81 = 54 Mike = 54 You can do the rest.... We have wicked smart kids ![]() |
OP, does the problem sheet say "Continental Math League" on it? |
Easy to solve if you learn Singapore bar modeling! I was typing on an iPhone and it didn't come out that well. Let me try on the computer. 96 93 Step 1. --------------l---------------- 189 D +M M + K Step 2 ? 81 ---------------l----------------189 M + M D+K Step 3 ---------------108 M+M Step 4 M= 54 This is a typical singapore math type word problem. No need for algebra. |
Ugh it still didn't format correctly. |
(Not the PP.)
Draw a bar. Give it a value of 96. Divide it somewhere. Label one part M and one part D. Stick another bar onto the end of it. Give it a value of 93. Divide it somewhere. Label one part M and one part K. Now you have a long bar, divided in four parts, labeled M, D, M, K, with a value of 96+93=189. Now you know what D+K is, namely 81. So shuffle the pieces around in the bar so that you have four parts, labeled M, M, D, K. The two parts labeled D and K, combined, have a value of 81. So the two remaining parts, labeled M and M, have a value of 189-81=108. If M+M=108, then M=54. And then you can figure out the other ones. (I'm the PP who's a fan of bar models, not the PP who came up with the bar-model solution.) |
At the 3rd grade, students are not yet exposed to algebra. However, many answers provided here are algebra based. What is going on? |
What school? |