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← 2-2 · Guess-and-check a legs problem · Two-Category Counts from a Total

Guess-and-check a legs problem · 10 practice problems

3.OA.A.33.OA.D.8

Generated variants — 10

Freshly produced from the archetype’s parameters — problem, figure, and solution derived together.

Variant 1 answer: 2 more cows

On Olivia's farm there are 1212 animals in all, some cows and some chickens. When she counts all the legs of the cows and chickens, there are 3838 legs in total. How many more cows than chickens are there?

Show solution

Understand

A farm has 12 animals that are cows and chickens, with 38 legs in total. Cows have 4 legs and chickens have 2 legs. We want how many more cows there are than chickens.

Givens
  • There are 12 animals in all (cows and chickens).
  • There are 38 legs in total.
  • A cow has 4 legs and a chicken has 2 legs.
Unknowns
  • The number of cows and the number of chickens.
  • How many more cows than chickens there are.
Constraints
  • Cows plus chickens equal 12.
  • Total legs equal 38.

Plan

#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List

Guess a number of cows, compute the legs with multiplication, and adjust until the total is right. A short organized list makes the right guess quick to reach.

Execute

#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.A.3
If all 12 animals were chickens, the legs would be 12 x 2 = 24. That is 14 fewer than 38, so some animals must be cows.
12×2=24,3824=1412 \times 2 = 24,\quad 38 - 24 = 14
Counting all legs as 2 each is an easy starting guess, and the shortfall tells how many extra legs are needed.
#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.D.8
Each time a chicken becomes a cow, the leg count goes up by 2 (from 2 legs to 4 legs). To add the missing 14 legs, swap 14 / 2 = 7 chickens into cows.
14÷2=714 \div 2 = 7
Every cow adds exactly 2 legs over a chicken, so dividing the missing legs by 2 gives the number of cows.
#2 Make a Systematic List 3.OA.D.8
So there are 7 cows and 5 chickens. Check: 7 x 4 + 5 x 2 = 28 + 10 = 38 legs. The number of more cows than chickens is 7 - 5 = 2.
7×4+5×2=38,75=27 \times 4 + 5 \times 2 = 38,\quad 7 - 5 = 2
Verifying the legs confirms the guess, and subtracting gives how many more cows there are.
Answer: 2 more cows

Review

7 cows and 5 chickens make 12 animals and 28 + 10 = 38 legs, matching both conditions, so the difference of 2 is correct.

You could make a table of cow counts (0,1,2,...) with total legs and read off the row giving 38 legs, which lands on 7 cows and 5 chickens.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing leg totals like 12 x 2 and 7 x 4 from the animal counts.
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the leg conditions and finding how many more cows than chickens.
💡 Guess all chickens, then trade up to cows two legs at a time -- just Grade 3 multiply-and-check!
Variant 2 answer: 1 more cows

On Amelia's farm there are 1111 animals in all, some cows and some chickens. When she counts all the legs of the cows and chickens, there are 3434 legs in total. How many more cows than chickens are there?

Show solution

Understand

A farm has 11 animals that are cows and chickens, with 34 legs in total. Cows have 4 legs and chickens have 2 legs. We want how many more cows there are than chickens.

Givens
  • There are 11 animals in all (cows and chickens).
  • There are 34 legs in total.
  • A cow has 4 legs and a chicken has 2 legs.
Unknowns
  • The number of cows and the number of chickens.
  • How many more cows than chickens there are.
Constraints
  • Cows plus chickens equal 11.
  • Total legs equal 34.

Plan

#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List

Guess a number of cows, compute the legs with multiplication, and adjust until the total is right. A short organized list makes the right guess quick to reach.

Execute

#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.A.3
If all 11 animals were chickens, the legs would be 11 x 2 = 22. That is 12 fewer than 34, so some animals must be cows.
11×2=22,3422=1211 \times 2 = 22,\quad 34 - 22 = 12
Counting all legs as 2 each is an easy starting guess, and the shortfall tells how many extra legs are needed.
#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.D.8
Each time a chicken becomes a cow, the leg count goes up by 2 (from 2 legs to 4 legs). To add the missing 12 legs, swap 12 / 2 = 6 chickens into cows.
12÷2=612 \div 2 = 6
Every cow adds exactly 2 legs over a chicken, so dividing the missing legs by 2 gives the number of cows.
#2 Make a Systematic List 3.OA.D.8
So there are 6 cows and 5 chickens. Check: 6 x 4 + 5 x 2 = 24 + 10 = 34 legs. The number of more cows than chickens is 6 - 5 = 1.
6×4+5×2=34,65=16 \times 4 + 5 \times 2 = 34,\quad 6 - 5 = 1
Verifying the legs confirms the guess, and subtracting gives how many more cows there are.
Answer: 1 more cows

Review

6 cows and 5 chickens make 11 animals and 24 + 10 = 34 legs, matching both conditions, so the difference of 1 is correct.

You could make a table of cow counts (0,1,2,...) with total legs and read off the row giving 34 legs, which lands on 6 cows and 5 chickens.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing leg totals like 11 x 2 and 6 x 4 from the animal counts.
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the leg conditions and finding how many more cows than chickens.
💡 Guess all chickens, then trade up to cows two legs at a time -- just Grade 3 multiply-and-check!
Variant 3 answer: 1 more cows

On Sophia's farm there are 77 animals in all, some cows and some chickens. When she counts all the legs of the cows and chickens, there are 2222 legs in total. How many more cows than chickens are there?

Show solution

Understand

A farm has 7 animals that are cows and chickens, with 22 legs in total. Cows have 4 legs and chickens have 2 legs. We want how many more cows there are than chickens.

Givens
  • There are 7 animals in all (cows and chickens).
  • There are 22 legs in total.
  • A cow has 4 legs and a chicken has 2 legs.
Unknowns
  • The number of cows and the number of chickens.
  • How many more cows than chickens there are.
Constraints
  • Cows plus chickens equal 7.
  • Total legs equal 22.

Plan

#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List

Guess a number of cows, compute the legs with multiplication, and adjust until the total is right. A short organized list makes the right guess quick to reach.

Execute

#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.A.3
If all 7 animals were chickens, the legs would be 7 x 2 = 14. That is 8 fewer than 22, so some animals must be cows.
7×2=14,2214=87 \times 2 = 14,\quad 22 - 14 = 8
Counting all legs as 2 each is an easy starting guess, and the shortfall tells how many extra legs are needed.
#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.D.8
Each time a chicken becomes a cow, the leg count goes up by 2 (from 2 legs to 4 legs). To add the missing 8 legs, swap 8 / 2 = 4 chickens into cows.
8÷2=48 \div 2 = 4
Every cow adds exactly 2 legs over a chicken, so dividing the missing legs by 2 gives the number of cows.
#2 Make a Systematic List 3.OA.D.8
So there are 4 cows and 3 chickens. Check: 4 x 4 + 3 x 2 = 16 + 6 = 22 legs. The number of more cows than chickens is 4 - 3 = 1.
4×4+3×2=22,43=14 \times 4 + 3 \times 2 = 22,\quad 4 - 3 = 1
Verifying the legs confirms the guess, and subtracting gives how many more cows there are.
Answer: 1 more cows

Review

4 cows and 3 chickens make 7 animals and 16 + 6 = 22 legs, matching both conditions, so the difference of 1 is correct.

You could make a table of cow counts (0,1,2,...) with total legs and read off the row giving 22 legs, which lands on 4 cows and 3 chickens.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing leg totals like 7 x 2 and 4 x 4 from the animal counts.
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the leg conditions and finding how many more cows than chickens.
💡 Guess all chickens, then trade up to cows two legs at a time -- just Grade 3 multiply-and-check!
Variant 4 answer: 2 more cows

On Henry's farm there are 1414 animals in all, some cows and some chickens. When she counts all the legs of the cows and chickens, there are 4444 legs in total. How many more cows than chickens are there?

Show solution

Understand

A farm has 14 animals that are cows and chickens, with 44 legs in total. Cows have 4 legs and chickens have 2 legs. We want how many more cows there are than chickens.

Givens
  • There are 14 animals in all (cows and chickens).
  • There are 44 legs in total.
  • A cow has 4 legs and a chicken has 2 legs.
Unknowns
  • The number of cows and the number of chickens.
  • How many more cows than chickens there are.
Constraints
  • Cows plus chickens equal 14.
  • Total legs equal 44.

Plan

#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List

Guess a number of cows, compute the legs with multiplication, and adjust until the total is right. A short organized list makes the right guess quick to reach.

Execute

#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.A.3
If all 14 animals were chickens, the legs would be 14 x 2 = 28. That is 16 fewer than 44, so some animals must be cows.
14×2=28,4428=1614 \times 2 = 28,\quad 44 - 28 = 16
Counting all legs as 2 each is an easy starting guess, and the shortfall tells how many extra legs are needed.
#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.D.8
Each time a chicken becomes a cow, the leg count goes up by 2 (from 2 legs to 4 legs). To add the missing 16 legs, swap 16 / 2 = 8 chickens into cows.
16÷2=816 \div 2 = 8
Every cow adds exactly 2 legs over a chicken, so dividing the missing legs by 2 gives the number of cows.
#2 Make a Systematic List 3.OA.D.8
So there are 8 cows and 6 chickens. Check: 8 x 4 + 6 x 2 = 32 + 12 = 44 legs. The number of more cows than chickens is 8 - 6 = 2.
8×4+6×2=44,86=28 \times 4 + 6 \times 2 = 44,\quad 8 - 6 = 2
Verifying the legs confirms the guess, and subtracting gives how many more cows there are.
Answer: 2 more cows

Review

8 cows and 6 chickens make 14 animals and 32 + 12 = 44 legs, matching both conditions, so the difference of 2 is correct.

You could make a table of cow counts (0,1,2,...) with total legs and read off the row giving 44 legs, which lands on 8 cows and 6 chickens.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing leg totals like 14 x 2 and 8 x 4 from the animal counts.
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the leg conditions and finding how many more cows than chickens.
💡 Guess all chickens, then trade up to cows two legs at a time -- just Grade 3 multiply-and-check!
Variant 5 answer: 1 more cows

On Lucas's farm there are 1515 animals in all, some cows and some chickens. When she counts all the legs of the cows and chickens, there are 4646 legs in total. How many more cows than chickens are there?

Show solution

Understand

A farm has 15 animals that are cows and chickens, with 46 legs in total. Cows have 4 legs and chickens have 2 legs. We want how many more cows there are than chickens.

Givens
  • There are 15 animals in all (cows and chickens).
  • There are 46 legs in total.
  • A cow has 4 legs and a chicken has 2 legs.
Unknowns
  • The number of cows and the number of chickens.
  • How many more cows than chickens there are.
Constraints
  • Cows plus chickens equal 15.
  • Total legs equal 46.

Plan

#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List

Guess a number of cows, compute the legs with multiplication, and adjust until the total is right. A short organized list makes the right guess quick to reach.

Execute

#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.A.3
If all 15 animals were chickens, the legs would be 15 x 2 = 30. That is 16 fewer than 46, so some animals must be cows.
15×2=30,4630=1615 \times 2 = 30,\quad 46 - 30 = 16
Counting all legs as 2 each is an easy starting guess, and the shortfall tells how many extra legs are needed.
#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.D.8
Each time a chicken becomes a cow, the leg count goes up by 2 (from 2 legs to 4 legs). To add the missing 16 legs, swap 16 / 2 = 8 chickens into cows.
16÷2=816 \div 2 = 8
Every cow adds exactly 2 legs over a chicken, so dividing the missing legs by 2 gives the number of cows.
#2 Make a Systematic List 3.OA.D.8
So there are 8 cows and 7 chickens. Check: 8 x 4 + 7 x 2 = 32 + 14 = 46 legs. The number of more cows than chickens is 8 - 7 = 1.
8×4+7×2=46,87=18 \times 4 + 7 \times 2 = 46,\quad 8 - 7 = 1
Verifying the legs confirms the guess, and subtracting gives how many more cows there are.
Answer: 1 more cows

Review

8 cows and 7 chickens make 15 animals and 32 + 14 = 46 legs, matching both conditions, so the difference of 1 is correct.

You could make a table of cow counts (0,1,2,...) with total legs and read off the row giving 46 legs, which lands on 8 cows and 7 chickens.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing leg totals like 15 x 2 and 8 x 4 from the animal counts.
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the leg conditions and finding how many more cows than chickens.
💡 Guess all chickens, then trade up to cows two legs at a time -- just Grade 3 multiply-and-check!
Variant 6 answer: 4 more cows

On Isaac's farm there are 2020 animals in all, some cows and some chickens. When she counts all the legs of the cows and chickens, there are 6464 legs in total. How many more cows than chickens are there?

Show solution

Understand

A farm has 20 animals that are cows and chickens, with 64 legs in total. Cows have 4 legs and chickens have 2 legs. We want how many more cows there are than chickens.

Givens
  • There are 20 animals in all (cows and chickens).
  • There are 64 legs in total.
  • A cow has 4 legs and a chicken has 2 legs.
Unknowns
  • The number of cows and the number of chickens.
  • How many more cows than chickens there are.
Constraints
  • Cows plus chickens equal 20.
  • Total legs equal 64.

Plan

#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List

Guess a number of cows, compute the legs with multiplication, and adjust until the total is right. A short organized list makes the right guess quick to reach.

Execute

#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.A.3
If all 20 animals were chickens, the legs would be 20 x 2 = 40. That is 24 fewer than 64, so some animals must be cows.
20×2=40,6440=2420 \times 2 = 40,\quad 64 - 40 = 24
Counting all legs as 2 each is an easy starting guess, and the shortfall tells how many extra legs are needed.
#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.D.8
Each time a chicken becomes a cow, the leg count goes up by 2 (from 2 legs to 4 legs). To add the missing 24 legs, swap 24 / 2 = 12 chickens into cows.
24÷2=1224 \div 2 = 12
Every cow adds exactly 2 legs over a chicken, so dividing the missing legs by 2 gives the number of cows.
#2 Make a Systematic List 3.OA.D.8
So there are 12 cows and 8 chickens. Check: 12 x 4 + 8 x 2 = 48 + 16 = 64 legs. The number of more cows than chickens is 12 - 8 = 4.
12×4+8×2=64,128=412 \times 4 + 8 \times 2 = 64,\quad 12 - 8 = 4
Verifying the legs confirms the guess, and subtracting gives how many more cows there are.
Answer: 4 more cows

Review

12 cows and 8 chickens make 20 animals and 48 + 16 = 64 legs, matching both conditions, so the difference of 4 is correct.

You could make a table of cow counts (0,1,2,...) with total legs and read off the row giving 64 legs, which lands on 12 cows and 8 chickens.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing leg totals like 20 x 2 and 12 x 4 from the animal counts.
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the leg conditions and finding how many more cows than chickens.
💡 Guess all chickens, then trade up to cows two legs at a time -- just Grade 3 multiply-and-check!
Variant 7 answer: 2 more cows

On Ethan's farm there are 88 animals in all, some cows and some chickens. When she counts all the legs of the cows and chickens, there are 2626 legs in total. How many more cows than chickens are there?

Show solution

Understand

A farm has 8 animals that are cows and chickens, with 26 legs in total. Cows have 4 legs and chickens have 2 legs. We want how many more cows there are than chickens.

Givens
  • There are 8 animals in all (cows and chickens).
  • There are 26 legs in total.
  • A cow has 4 legs and a chicken has 2 legs.
Unknowns
  • The number of cows and the number of chickens.
  • How many more cows than chickens there are.
Constraints
  • Cows plus chickens equal 8.
  • Total legs equal 26.

Plan

#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List

Guess a number of cows, compute the legs with multiplication, and adjust until the total is right. A short organized list makes the right guess quick to reach.

Execute

#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.A.3
If all 8 animals were chickens, the legs would be 8 x 2 = 16. That is 10 fewer than 26, so some animals must be cows.
8×2=16,2616=108 \times 2 = 16,\quad 26 - 16 = 10
Counting all legs as 2 each is an easy starting guess, and the shortfall tells how many extra legs are needed.
#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.D.8
Each time a chicken becomes a cow, the leg count goes up by 2 (from 2 legs to 4 legs). To add the missing 10 legs, swap 10 / 2 = 5 chickens into cows.
10÷2=510 \div 2 = 5
Every cow adds exactly 2 legs over a chicken, so dividing the missing legs by 2 gives the number of cows.
#2 Make a Systematic List 3.OA.D.8
So there are 5 cows and 3 chickens. Check: 5 x 4 + 3 x 2 = 20 + 6 = 26 legs. The number of more cows than chickens is 5 - 3 = 2.
5×4+3×2=26,53=25 \times 4 + 3 \times 2 = 26,\quad 5 - 3 = 2
Verifying the legs confirms the guess, and subtracting gives how many more cows there are.
Answer: 2 more cows

Review

5 cows and 3 chickens make 8 animals and 20 + 6 = 26 legs, matching both conditions, so the difference of 2 is correct.

You could make a table of cow counts (0,1,2,...) with total legs and read off the row giving 26 legs, which lands on 5 cows and 3 chickens.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing leg totals like 8 x 2 and 5 x 4 from the animal counts.
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the leg conditions and finding how many more cows than chickens.
💡 Guess all chickens, then trade up to cows two legs at a time -- just Grade 3 multiply-and-check!
Variant 8 answer: 1 more cows

On Mason's farm there are 99 animals in all, some cows and some chickens. When she counts all the legs of the cows and chickens, there are 2828 legs in total. How many more cows than chickens are there?

Show solution

Understand

A farm has 9 animals that are cows and chickens, with 28 legs in total. Cows have 4 legs and chickens have 2 legs. We want how many more cows there are than chickens.

Givens
  • There are 9 animals in all (cows and chickens).
  • There are 28 legs in total.
  • A cow has 4 legs and a chicken has 2 legs.
Unknowns
  • The number of cows and the number of chickens.
  • How many more cows than chickens there are.
Constraints
  • Cows plus chickens equal 9.
  • Total legs equal 28.

Plan

#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List

Guess a number of cows, compute the legs with multiplication, and adjust until the total is right. A short organized list makes the right guess quick to reach.

Execute

#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.A.3
If all 9 animals were chickens, the legs would be 9 x 2 = 18. That is 10 fewer than 28, so some animals must be cows.
9×2=18,2818=109 \times 2 = 18,\quad 28 - 18 = 10
Counting all legs as 2 each is an easy starting guess, and the shortfall tells how many extra legs are needed.
#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.D.8
Each time a chicken becomes a cow, the leg count goes up by 2 (from 2 legs to 4 legs). To add the missing 10 legs, swap 10 / 2 = 5 chickens into cows.
10÷2=510 \div 2 = 5
Every cow adds exactly 2 legs over a chicken, so dividing the missing legs by 2 gives the number of cows.
#2 Make a Systematic List 3.OA.D.8
So there are 5 cows and 4 chickens. Check: 5 x 4 + 4 x 2 = 20 + 8 = 28 legs. The number of more cows than chickens is 5 - 4 = 1.
5×4+4×2=28,54=15 \times 4 + 4 \times 2 = 28,\quad 5 - 4 = 1
Verifying the legs confirms the guess, and subtracting gives how many more cows there are.
Answer: 1 more cows

Review

5 cows and 4 chickens make 9 animals and 20 + 8 = 28 legs, matching both conditions, so the difference of 1 is correct.

You could make a table of cow counts (0,1,2,...) with total legs and read off the row giving 28 legs, which lands on 5 cows and 4 chickens.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing leg totals like 9 x 2 and 5 x 4 from the animal counts.
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the leg conditions and finding how many more cows than chickens.
💡 Guess all chickens, then trade up to cows two legs at a time -- just Grade 3 multiply-and-check!
Variant 9 answer: 2 more cows

On Chloe's farm there are 66 animals in all, some cows and some chickens. When she counts all the legs of the cows and chickens, there are 2020 legs in total. How many more cows than chickens are there?

Show solution

Understand

A farm has 6 animals that are cows and chickens, with 20 legs in total. Cows have 4 legs and chickens have 2 legs. We want how many more cows there are than chickens.

Givens
  • There are 6 animals in all (cows and chickens).
  • There are 20 legs in total.
  • A cow has 4 legs and a chicken has 2 legs.
Unknowns
  • The number of cows and the number of chickens.
  • How many more cows than chickens there are.
Constraints
  • Cows plus chickens equal 6.
  • Total legs equal 20.

Plan

#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List

Guess a number of cows, compute the legs with multiplication, and adjust until the total is right. A short organized list makes the right guess quick to reach.

Execute

#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.A.3
If all 6 animals were chickens, the legs would be 6 x 2 = 12. That is 8 fewer than 20, so some animals must be cows.
6×2=12,2012=86 \times 2 = 12,\quad 20 - 12 = 8
Counting all legs as 2 each is an easy starting guess, and the shortfall tells how many extra legs are needed.
#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.D.8
Each time a chicken becomes a cow, the leg count goes up by 2 (from 2 legs to 4 legs). To add the missing 8 legs, swap 8 / 2 = 4 chickens into cows.
8÷2=48 \div 2 = 4
Every cow adds exactly 2 legs over a chicken, so dividing the missing legs by 2 gives the number of cows.
#2 Make a Systematic List 3.OA.D.8
So there are 4 cows and 2 chickens. Check: 4 x 4 + 2 x 2 = 16 + 4 = 20 legs. The number of more cows than chickens is 4 - 2 = 2.
4×4+2×2=20,42=24 \times 4 + 2 \times 2 = 20,\quad 4 - 2 = 2
Verifying the legs confirms the guess, and subtracting gives how many more cows there are.
Answer: 2 more cows

Review

4 cows and 2 chickens make 6 animals and 16 + 4 = 20 legs, matching both conditions, so the difference of 2 is correct.

You could make a table of cow counts (0,1,2,...) with total legs and read off the row giving 20 legs, which lands on 4 cows and 2 chickens.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing leg totals like 6 x 2 and 4 x 4 from the animal counts.
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the leg conditions and finding how many more cows than chickens.
💡 Guess all chickens, then trade up to cows two legs at a time -- just Grade 3 multiply-and-check!
Variant 10 answer: 2 more cows

On Naomi's farm there are 1010 animals in all, some cows and some chickens. When she counts all the legs of the cows and chickens, there are 3232 legs in total. How many more cows than chickens are there?

Show solution

Understand

A farm has 10 animals that are cows and chickens, with 32 legs in total. Cows have 4 legs and chickens have 2 legs. We want how many more cows there are than chickens.

Givens
  • There are 10 animals in all (cows and chickens).
  • There are 32 legs in total.
  • A cow has 4 legs and a chicken has 2 legs.
Unknowns
  • The number of cows and the number of chickens.
  • How many more cows than chickens there are.
Constraints
  • Cows plus chickens equal 10.
  • Total legs equal 32.

Plan

#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #2 Make a Systematic List

Guess a number of cows, compute the legs with multiplication, and adjust until the total is right. A short organized list makes the right guess quick to reach.

Execute

#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.A.3
If all 10 animals were chickens, the legs would be 10 x 2 = 20. That is 12 fewer than 32, so some animals must be cows.
10×2=20,3220=1210 \times 2 = 20,\quad 32 - 20 = 12
Counting all legs as 2 each is an easy starting guess, and the shortfall tells how many extra legs are needed.
#6 Guess and Check 3.OA.D.8
Each time a chicken becomes a cow, the leg count goes up by 2 (from 2 legs to 4 legs). To add the missing 12 legs, swap 12 / 2 = 6 chickens into cows.
12÷2=612 \div 2 = 6
Every cow adds exactly 2 legs over a chicken, so dividing the missing legs by 2 gives the number of cows.
#2 Make a Systematic List 3.OA.D.8
So there are 6 cows and 4 chickens. Check: 6 x 4 + 4 x 2 = 24 + 8 = 32 legs. The number of more cows than chickens is 6 - 4 = 2.
6×4+4×2=32,64=26 \times 4 + 4 \times 2 = 32,\quad 6 - 4 = 2
Verifying the legs confirms the guess, and subtracting gives how many more cows there are.
Answer: 2 more cows

Review

6 cows and 4 chickens make 10 animals and 24 + 8 = 32 legs, matching both conditions, so the difference of 2 is correct.

You could make a table of cow counts (0,1,2,...) with total legs and read off the row giving 32 legs, which lands on 6 cows and 4 chickens.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing leg totals like 10 x 2 and 6 x 4 from the animal counts.
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Combining the leg conditions and finding how many more cows than chickens.
💡 Guess all chickens, then trade up to cows two legs at a time -- just Grade 3 multiply-and-check!