Choose a scale that fits the largest value
Representative Problem
The table shows the favorite flowers of the students at Mia's school. If this table is drawn as a bar graph in which one vertical grid square represents students, find the least number of vertical grid squares the scale must have.
Table "Favorite Flower":
| Flower | Rose | Tulip | Lily | Daisy | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of students | (?) |
- (Number of students who like roses) [ ] [ ] (students)
- Since [ ] students like roses, the vertical scale must reach at least [ ] students.
- If one vertical grid square represents students, the vertical scale needs at least [ ] squares.
Show solution
Understand
A table lists how many students like roses, tulips (18), lilies (10), and daisies (14), with a total of 64. First find the missing rose count, then decide how many vertical grid squares a bar graph needs if one square stands for 2 students.
- Tulip = 18, Lily = 10, Daisy = 14 students
- Total = 64 students
- One vertical grid square represents 2 students
- The number of students who like roses
- The least number of vertical grid squares the scale must have
- The scale must reach at least the largest single value
- Each grid square stands for exactly 2 students
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units
This is a two-step task: first recover the missing value from the total (a subtraction subproblem), then convert the largest value into grid squares using the 'students per square' unit.
Execute
Review
11 squares at 2 students each reach 22 students, matching the largest value, and 22 is bigger than every other count, so 11 squares is the smallest scale that fits.
Guess and check (tool 6): 10 squares reach only 20 students, too short for 22; 11 squares reach 22, which works, confirming 11 is the least.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Choosing a vertical scale that fits the largest data value and counting the needed grid squares