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← 3-1 · Write a growing pattern as an expression · Generalize a Growing Pattern into a Rule

Write a growing pattern as an expression · 9 practice problems

3.OA.D.93.OA.D.83.OA.A.3

Generated variants — 9

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

Variant 1 answer: 22 thumbtacks

As shown in the figure, sheets of paper are being pinned to a bulletin board with thumbtacks. How many thumbtacks are needed in all to pin up 1010 sheets?

(Figure) Rectangular sheets of paper are pinned side by side in a single horizontal row, where each pair of neighboring sheets overlaps along its shared edge and uses the same thumbtacks there. A thumbtack is placed at each of the four corners of every sheet, but the thumbtacks along an overlapping edge are shared by the two sheets. Pinning up 11 sheet needs 44 thumbtacks, and each additional sheet needs 22 more thumbtacks.

Show solution

Understand

Sheets of paper are pinned in a single row on a bulletin board. Pinning 1 sheet needs 4 thumbtacks (one at each corner), and each additional sheet shares an edge with its neighbor so it needs only 2 more thumbtacks. We must find how many thumbtacks are needed for 10 sheets.

Givens
  • 1 sheet needs 4 thumbtacks
  • Each additional sheet needs 2 more thumbtacks (corners on the shared edge are reused)
  • There are 10 sheets in a row
Unknowns
  • The total number of thumbtacks for 10 sheets
Constraints
  • Sheets are in one horizontal row
  • Tacks on a shared edge serve both neighboring sheets

Plan

#5 Look for a Pattern · also uses: #9 Solve an Easier Related Problem#1 Draw a Diagram

The figure shows the row growing by one sheet at a time, each adding exactly 2 new tacks. Building small cases reveals the rule 'start with 4, then add 2 for each extra sheet,' which becomes a multiplication-plus-addition expression for any count.

Execute

#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem 3.OA.D.9
Use small cases from the figure: 1 sheet needs 4 tacks; 2 sheets need 4 + 2 = 6; 3 sheets need 4 + 2 + 2 = 8. Each new sheet after the first adds 2 tacks.
$4,\ 6,\ 8,\ \ldots$ (add 2 each time)
Looking at one, two, then three sheets makes the steady jump of 2 easy to spot.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.D.8
After the first sheet there are 10 - 1 = 9 extra sheets, each adding 2 tacks, on top of the starting 4.
4+(101)×24 + (10 - 1) \times 2
The first sheet sets the 4, and every later sheet contributes the same 2 tacks.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.A.3
Compute the extra tacks then add the starting amount.
4+9×2=4+18=224 + 9 \times 2 = 4 + 18 = 22
9 added sheets bring 18 tacks, plus the original 4 makes 22.
Answer: 22 thumbtacks

Review

Check the rule on a small case: 3 sheets give 4 + 2 times 2 = 8, which matches counting tacks in the figure. For 10 sheets, 22 tacks is between 4 (one sheet) and 10 times 4 = 40 (if none were shared), which is sensible.

Build up by repeated addition: start at 4 for the first sheet, then add 2 for each of the remaining 9 sheets one at a time; this reaches 22 and agrees with the multiplication shortcut.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.D.9 Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Finding the steady increase of 2 tacks per added sheet
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Writing the rule as 4 + (10 - 1) times 2 and evaluating it
  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing 9 times 2 and adding to reach the total
💡 Find how much the count grows each step, start from the first one, then multiply and add: 4 + 9 times 2 = 22!
Variant 2 answer: 46 thumbtacks

As shown in the figure, sheets of paper are being pinned to a bulletin board with thumbtacks. How many thumbtacks are needed in all to pin up 1515 sheets?

(Figure) Rectangular sheets of paper are pinned side by side in a single horizontal row, where each pair of neighboring sheets overlaps along its shared edge and uses the same thumbtacks there. A thumbtack is placed at each of the four corners of every sheet, but the thumbtacks along an overlapping edge are shared by the two sheets. Pinning up 11 sheet needs 44 thumbtacks, and each additional sheet needs 33 more thumbtacks.

Show solution

Understand

Sheets of paper are pinned in a single row on a bulletin board. Pinning 1 sheet needs 4 thumbtacks (one at each corner), and each additional sheet shares an edge with its neighbor so it needs only 3 more thumbtacks. We must find how many thumbtacks are needed for 15 sheets.

Givens
  • 1 sheet needs 4 thumbtacks
  • Each additional sheet needs 3 more thumbtacks (corners on the shared edge are reused)
  • There are 15 sheets in a row
Unknowns
  • The total number of thumbtacks for 15 sheets
Constraints
  • Sheets are in one horizontal row
  • Tacks on a shared edge serve both neighboring sheets

Plan

#5 Look for a Pattern · also uses: #9 Solve an Easier Related Problem#1 Draw a Diagram

The figure shows the row growing by one sheet at a time, each adding exactly 3 new tacks. Building small cases reveals the rule 'start with 4, then add 3 for each extra sheet,' which becomes a multiplication-plus-addition expression for any count.

Execute

#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem 3.OA.D.9
Use small cases from the figure: 1 sheet needs 4 tacks; 2 sheets need 4 + 3 = 7; 3 sheets need 4 + 3 + 3 = 10. Each new sheet after the first adds 3 tacks.
$4,\ 7,\ 10,\ \ldots$ (add 3 each time)
Looking at one, two, then three sheets makes the steady jump of 3 easy to spot.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.D.8
After the first sheet there are 15 - 1 = 14 extra sheets, each adding 3 tacks, on top of the starting 4.
4+(151)×34 + (15 - 1) \times 3
The first sheet sets the 4, and every later sheet contributes the same 3 tacks.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.A.3
Compute the extra tacks then add the starting amount.
4+14×3=4+42=464 + 14 \times 3 = 4 + 42 = 46
14 added sheets bring 42 tacks, plus the original 4 makes 46.
Answer: 46 thumbtacks

Review

Check the rule on a small case: 3 sheets give 4 + 2 times 3 = 10, which matches counting tacks in the figure. For 15 sheets, 46 tacks is between 4 (one sheet) and 15 times 4 = 60 (if none were shared), which is sensible.

Build up by repeated addition: start at 4 for the first sheet, then add 3 for each of the remaining 14 sheets one at a time; this reaches 46 and agrees with the multiplication shortcut.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.D.9 Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Finding the steady increase of 3 tacks per added sheet
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Writing the rule as 4 + (15 - 1) times 3 and evaluating it
  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing 14 times 3 and adding to reach the total
💡 Find how much the count grows each step, start from the first one, then multiply and add: 4 + 14 times 3 = 46!
Variant 3 answer: 19 thumbtacks

As shown in the figure, sheets of paper are being pinned to a bulletin board with thumbtacks. How many thumbtacks are needed in all to pin up 88 sheets?

(Figure) Rectangular sheets of paper are pinned side by side in a single horizontal row, where each pair of neighboring sheets overlaps along its shared edge and uses the same thumbtacks there. A thumbtack is placed at each of the four corners of every sheet, but the thumbtacks along an overlapping edge are shared by the two sheets. Pinning up 11 sheet needs 55 thumbtacks, and each additional sheet needs 22 more thumbtacks.

Show solution

Understand

Sheets of paper are pinned in a single row on a bulletin board. Pinning 1 sheet needs 5 thumbtacks (one at each corner), and each additional sheet shares an edge with its neighbor so it needs only 2 more thumbtacks. We must find how many thumbtacks are needed for 8 sheets.

Givens
  • 1 sheet needs 5 thumbtacks
  • Each additional sheet needs 2 more thumbtacks (corners on the shared edge are reused)
  • There are 8 sheets in a row
Unknowns
  • The total number of thumbtacks for 8 sheets
Constraints
  • Sheets are in one horizontal row
  • Tacks on a shared edge serve both neighboring sheets

Plan

#5 Look for a Pattern · also uses: #9 Solve an Easier Related Problem#1 Draw a Diagram

The figure shows the row growing by one sheet at a time, each adding exactly 2 new tacks. Building small cases reveals the rule 'start with 5, then add 2 for each extra sheet,' which becomes a multiplication-plus-addition expression for any count.

Execute

#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem 3.OA.D.9
Use small cases from the figure: 1 sheet needs 5 tacks; 2 sheets need 5 + 2 = 7; 3 sheets need 5 + 2 + 2 = 9. Each new sheet after the first adds 2 tacks.
$5,\ 7,\ 9,\ \ldots$ (add 2 each time)
Looking at one, two, then three sheets makes the steady jump of 2 easy to spot.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.D.8
After the first sheet there are 8 - 1 = 7 extra sheets, each adding 2 tacks, on top of the starting 5.
5+(81)×25 + (8 - 1) \times 2
The first sheet sets the 5, and every later sheet contributes the same 2 tacks.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.A.3
Compute the extra tacks then add the starting amount.
5+7×2=5+14=195 + 7 \times 2 = 5 + 14 = 19
7 added sheets bring 14 tacks, plus the original 5 makes 19.
Answer: 19 thumbtacks

Review

Check the rule on a small case: 3 sheets give 5 + 2 times 2 = 9, which matches counting tacks in the figure. For 8 sheets, 19 tacks is between 5 (one sheet) and 8 times 5 = 40 (if none were shared), which is sensible.

Build up by repeated addition: start at 5 for the first sheet, then add 2 for each of the remaining 7 sheets one at a time; this reaches 19 and agrees with the multiplication shortcut.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.D.9 Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Finding the steady increase of 2 tacks per added sheet
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Writing the rule as 5 + (8 - 1) times 2 and evaluating it
  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing 7 times 2 and adding to reach the total
💡 Find how much the count grows each step, start from the first one, then multiply and add: 5 + 7 times 2 = 19!
Variant 4 answer: 52 thumbtacks

As shown in the figure, sheets of paper are being pinned to a bulletin board with thumbtacks. How many thumbtacks are needed in all to pin up 2525 sheets?

(Figure) Rectangular sheets of paper are pinned side by side in a single horizontal row, where each pair of neighboring sheets overlaps along its shared edge and uses the same thumbtacks there. A thumbtack is placed at each of the four corners of every sheet, but the thumbtacks along an overlapping edge are shared by the two sheets. Pinning up 11 sheet needs 44 thumbtacks, and each additional sheet needs 22 more thumbtacks.

Show solution

Understand

Sheets of paper are pinned in a single row on a bulletin board. Pinning 1 sheet needs 4 thumbtacks (one at each corner), and each additional sheet shares an edge with its neighbor so it needs only 2 more thumbtacks. We must find how many thumbtacks are needed for 25 sheets.

Givens
  • 1 sheet needs 4 thumbtacks
  • Each additional sheet needs 2 more thumbtacks (corners on the shared edge are reused)
  • There are 25 sheets in a row
Unknowns
  • The total number of thumbtacks for 25 sheets
Constraints
  • Sheets are in one horizontal row
  • Tacks on a shared edge serve both neighboring sheets

Plan

#5 Look for a Pattern · also uses: #9 Solve an Easier Related Problem#1 Draw a Diagram

The figure shows the row growing by one sheet at a time, each adding exactly 2 new tacks. Building small cases reveals the rule 'start with 4, then add 2 for each extra sheet,' which becomes a multiplication-plus-addition expression for any count.

Execute

#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem 3.OA.D.9
Use small cases from the figure: 1 sheet needs 4 tacks; 2 sheets need 4 + 2 = 6; 3 sheets need 4 + 2 + 2 = 8. Each new sheet after the first adds 2 tacks.
$4,\ 6,\ 8,\ \ldots$ (add 2 each time)
Looking at one, two, then three sheets makes the steady jump of 2 easy to spot.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.D.8
After the first sheet there are 25 - 1 = 24 extra sheets, each adding 2 tacks, on top of the starting 4.
4+(251)×24 + (25 - 1) \times 2
The first sheet sets the 4, and every later sheet contributes the same 2 tacks.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.A.3
Compute the extra tacks then add the starting amount.
4+24×2=4+48=524 + 24 \times 2 = 4 + 48 = 52
24 added sheets bring 48 tacks, plus the original 4 makes 52.
Answer: 52 thumbtacks

Review

Check the rule on a small case: 3 sheets give 4 + 2 times 2 = 8, which matches counting tacks in the figure. For 25 sheets, 52 tacks is between 4 (one sheet) and 25 times 4 = 100 (if none were shared), which is sensible.

Build up by repeated addition: start at 4 for the first sheet, then add 2 for each of the remaining 24 sheets one at a time; this reaches 52 and agrees with the multiplication shortcut.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.D.9 Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Finding the steady increase of 2 tacks per added sheet
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Writing the rule as 4 + (25 - 1) times 2 and evaluating it
  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing 24 times 2 and adding to reach the total
💡 Find how much the count grows each step, start from the first one, then multiply and add: 4 + 24 times 2 = 52!
Variant 5 answer: 40 thumbtacks

As shown in the figure, sheets of paper are being pinned to a bulletin board with thumbtacks. How many thumbtacks are needed in all to pin up 99 sheets?

(Figure) Rectangular sheets of paper are pinned side by side in a single horizontal row, where each pair of neighboring sheets overlaps along its shared edge and uses the same thumbtacks there. A thumbtack is placed at each of the four corners of every sheet, but the thumbtacks along an overlapping edge are shared by the two sheets. Pinning up 11 sheet needs 88 thumbtacks, and each additional sheet needs 44 more thumbtacks.

Show solution

Understand

Sheets of paper are pinned in a single row on a bulletin board. Pinning 1 sheet needs 8 thumbtacks (one at each corner), and each additional sheet shares an edge with its neighbor so it needs only 4 more thumbtacks. We must find how many thumbtacks are needed for 9 sheets.

Givens
  • 1 sheet needs 8 thumbtacks
  • Each additional sheet needs 4 more thumbtacks (corners on the shared edge are reused)
  • There are 9 sheets in a row
Unknowns
  • The total number of thumbtacks for 9 sheets
Constraints
  • Sheets are in one horizontal row
  • Tacks on a shared edge serve both neighboring sheets

Plan

#5 Look for a Pattern · also uses: #9 Solve an Easier Related Problem#1 Draw a Diagram

The figure shows the row growing by one sheet at a time, each adding exactly 4 new tacks. Building small cases reveals the rule 'start with 8, then add 4 for each extra sheet,' which becomes a multiplication-plus-addition expression for any count.

Execute

#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem 3.OA.D.9
Use small cases from the figure: 1 sheet needs 8 tacks; 2 sheets need 8 + 4 = 12; 3 sheets need 8 + 4 + 4 = 16. Each new sheet after the first adds 4 tacks.
$8,\ 12,\ 16,\ \ldots$ (add 4 each time)
Looking at one, two, then three sheets makes the steady jump of 4 easy to spot.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.D.8
After the first sheet there are 9 - 1 = 8 extra sheets, each adding 4 tacks, on top of the starting 8.
8+(91)×48 + (9 - 1) \times 4
The first sheet sets the 8, and every later sheet contributes the same 4 tacks.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.A.3
Compute the extra tacks then add the starting amount.
8+8×4=8+32=408 + 8 \times 4 = 8 + 32 = 40
8 added sheets bring 32 tacks, plus the original 8 makes 40.
Answer: 40 thumbtacks

Review

Check the rule on a small case: 3 sheets give 8 + 2 times 4 = 16, which matches counting tacks in the figure. For 9 sheets, 40 tacks is between 8 (one sheet) and 9 times 8 = 72 (if none were shared), which is sensible.

Build up by repeated addition: start at 8 for the first sheet, then add 4 for each of the remaining 8 sheets one at a time; this reaches 40 and agrees with the multiplication shortcut.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.D.9 Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Finding the steady increase of 4 tacks per added sheet
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Writing the rule as 8 + (9 - 1) times 4 and evaluating it
  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing 8 times 4 and adding to reach the total
💡 Find how much the count grows each step, start from the first one, then multiply and add: 8 + 8 times 4 = 40!
Variant 6 answer: 31 thumbtacks

As shown in the figure, sheets of paper are being pinned to a bulletin board with thumbtacks. How many thumbtacks are needed in all to pin up 3030 sheets?

(Figure) Rectangular sheets of paper are pinned side by side in a single horizontal row, where each pair of neighboring sheets overlaps along its shared edge and uses the same thumbtacks there. A thumbtack is placed at each of the four corners of every sheet, but the thumbtacks along an overlapping edge are shared by the two sheets. Pinning up 11 sheet needs 22 thumbtacks, and each additional sheet needs 11 more thumbtacks.

Show solution

Understand

Sheets of paper are pinned in a single row on a bulletin board. Pinning 1 sheet needs 2 thumbtacks (one at each corner), and each additional sheet shares an edge with its neighbor so it needs only 1 more thumbtacks. We must find how many thumbtacks are needed for 30 sheets.

Givens
  • 1 sheet needs 2 thumbtacks
  • Each additional sheet needs 1 more thumbtacks (corners on the shared edge are reused)
  • There are 30 sheets in a row
Unknowns
  • The total number of thumbtacks for 30 sheets
Constraints
  • Sheets are in one horizontal row
  • Tacks on a shared edge serve both neighboring sheets

Plan

#5 Look for a Pattern · also uses: #9 Solve an Easier Related Problem#1 Draw a Diagram

The figure shows the row growing by one sheet at a time, each adding exactly 1 new tacks. Building small cases reveals the rule 'start with 2, then add 1 for each extra sheet,' which becomes a multiplication-plus-addition expression for any count.

Execute

#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem 3.OA.D.9
Use small cases from the figure: 1 sheet needs 2 tacks; 2 sheets need 2 + 1 = 3; 3 sheets need 2 + 1 + 1 = 4. Each new sheet after the first adds 1 tacks.
$2,\ 3,\ 4,\ \ldots$ (add 1 each time)
Looking at one, two, then three sheets makes the steady jump of 1 easy to spot.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.D.8
After the first sheet there are 30 - 1 = 29 extra sheets, each adding 1 tacks, on top of the starting 2.
2+(301)×12 + (30 - 1) \times 1
The first sheet sets the 2, and every later sheet contributes the same 1 tacks.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.A.3
Compute the extra tacks then add the starting amount.
2+29×1=2+29=312 + 29 \times 1 = 2 + 29 = 31
29 added sheets bring 29 tacks, plus the original 2 makes 31.
Answer: 31 thumbtacks

Review

Check the rule on a small case: 3 sheets give 2 + 2 times 1 = 4, which matches counting tacks in the figure. For 30 sheets, 31 tacks is between 2 (one sheet) and 30 times 2 = 60 (if none were shared), which is sensible.

Build up by repeated addition: start at 2 for the first sheet, then add 1 for each of the remaining 29 sheets one at a time; this reaches 31 and agrees with the multiplication shortcut.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.D.9 Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Finding the steady increase of 1 tacks per added sheet
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Writing the rule as 2 + (30 - 1) times 1 and evaluating it
  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing 29 times 1 and adding to reach the total
💡 Find how much the count grows each step, start from the first one, then multiply and add: 2 + 29 times 1 = 31!
Variant 7 answer: 14 thumbtacks

As shown in the figure, sheets of paper are being pinned to a bulletin board with thumbtacks. How many thumbtacks are needed in all to pin up 1212 sheets?

(Figure) Rectangular sheets of paper are pinned side by side in a single horizontal row, where each pair of neighboring sheets overlaps along its shared edge and uses the same thumbtacks there. A thumbtack is placed at each of the four corners of every sheet, but the thumbtacks along an overlapping edge are shared by the two sheets. Pinning up 11 sheet needs 33 thumbtacks, and each additional sheet needs 11 more thumbtacks.

Show solution

Understand

Sheets of paper are pinned in a single row on a bulletin board. Pinning 1 sheet needs 3 thumbtacks (one at each corner), and each additional sheet shares an edge with its neighbor so it needs only 1 more thumbtacks. We must find how many thumbtacks are needed for 12 sheets.

Givens
  • 1 sheet needs 3 thumbtacks
  • Each additional sheet needs 1 more thumbtacks (corners on the shared edge are reused)
  • There are 12 sheets in a row
Unknowns
  • The total number of thumbtacks for 12 sheets
Constraints
  • Sheets are in one horizontal row
  • Tacks on a shared edge serve both neighboring sheets

Plan

#5 Look for a Pattern · also uses: #9 Solve an Easier Related Problem#1 Draw a Diagram

The figure shows the row growing by one sheet at a time, each adding exactly 1 new tacks. Building small cases reveals the rule 'start with 3, then add 1 for each extra sheet,' which becomes a multiplication-plus-addition expression for any count.

Execute

#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem 3.OA.D.9
Use small cases from the figure: 1 sheet needs 3 tacks; 2 sheets need 3 + 1 = 4; 3 sheets need 3 + 1 + 1 = 5. Each new sheet after the first adds 1 tacks.
$3,\ 4,\ 5,\ \ldots$ (add 1 each time)
Looking at one, two, then three sheets makes the steady jump of 1 easy to spot.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.D.8
After the first sheet there are 12 - 1 = 11 extra sheets, each adding 1 tacks, on top of the starting 3.
3+(121)×13 + (12 - 1) \times 1
The first sheet sets the 3, and every later sheet contributes the same 1 tacks.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.A.3
Compute the extra tacks then add the starting amount.
3+11×1=3+11=143 + 11 \times 1 = 3 + 11 = 14
11 added sheets bring 11 tacks, plus the original 3 makes 14.
Answer: 14 thumbtacks

Review

Check the rule on a small case: 3 sheets give 3 + 2 times 1 = 5, which matches counting tacks in the figure. For 12 sheets, 14 tacks is between 3 (one sheet) and 12 times 3 = 36 (if none were shared), which is sensible.

Build up by repeated addition: start at 3 for the first sheet, then add 1 for each of the remaining 11 sheets one at a time; this reaches 14 and agrees with the multiplication shortcut.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.D.9 Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Finding the steady increase of 1 tacks per added sheet
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Writing the rule as 3 + (12 - 1) times 1 and evaluating it
  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing 11 times 1 and adding to reach the total
💡 Find how much the count grows each step, start from the first one, then multiply and add: 3 + 11 times 1 = 14!
Variant 8 answer: 63 thumbtacks

As shown in the figure, sheets of paper are being pinned to a bulletin board with thumbtacks. How many thumbtacks are needed in all to pin up 2020 sheets?

(Figure) Rectangular sheets of paper are pinned side by side in a single horizontal row, where each pair of neighboring sheets overlaps along its shared edge and uses the same thumbtacks there. A thumbtack is placed at each of the four corners of every sheet, but the thumbtacks along an overlapping edge are shared by the two sheets. Pinning up 11 sheet needs 66 thumbtacks, and each additional sheet needs 33 more thumbtacks.

Show solution

Understand

Sheets of paper are pinned in a single row on a bulletin board. Pinning 1 sheet needs 6 thumbtacks (one at each corner), and each additional sheet shares an edge with its neighbor so it needs only 3 more thumbtacks. We must find how many thumbtacks are needed for 20 sheets.

Givens
  • 1 sheet needs 6 thumbtacks
  • Each additional sheet needs 3 more thumbtacks (corners on the shared edge are reused)
  • There are 20 sheets in a row
Unknowns
  • The total number of thumbtacks for 20 sheets
Constraints
  • Sheets are in one horizontal row
  • Tacks on a shared edge serve both neighboring sheets

Plan

#5 Look for a Pattern · also uses: #9 Solve an Easier Related Problem#1 Draw a Diagram

The figure shows the row growing by one sheet at a time, each adding exactly 3 new tacks. Building small cases reveals the rule 'start with 6, then add 3 for each extra sheet,' which becomes a multiplication-plus-addition expression for any count.

Execute

#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem 3.OA.D.9
Use small cases from the figure: 1 sheet needs 6 tacks; 2 sheets need 6 + 3 = 9; 3 sheets need 6 + 3 + 3 = 12. Each new sheet after the first adds 3 tacks.
$6,\ 9,\ 12,\ \ldots$ (add 3 each time)
Looking at one, two, then three sheets makes the steady jump of 3 easy to spot.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.D.8
After the first sheet there are 20 - 1 = 19 extra sheets, each adding 3 tacks, on top of the starting 6.
6+(201)×36 + (20 - 1) \times 3
The first sheet sets the 6, and every later sheet contributes the same 3 tacks.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.A.3
Compute the extra tacks then add the starting amount.
6+19×3=6+57=636 + 19 \times 3 = 6 + 57 = 63
19 added sheets bring 57 tacks, plus the original 6 makes 63.
Answer: 63 thumbtacks

Review

Check the rule on a small case: 3 sheets give 6 + 2 times 3 = 12, which matches counting tacks in the figure. For 20 sheets, 63 tacks is between 6 (one sheet) and 20 times 6 = 120 (if none were shared), which is sensible.

Build up by repeated addition: start at 6 for the first sheet, then add 3 for each of the remaining 19 sheets one at a time; this reaches 63 and agrees with the multiplication shortcut.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.D.9 Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Finding the steady increase of 3 tacks per added sheet
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Writing the rule as 6 + (20 - 1) times 3 and evaluating it
  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing 19 times 3 and adding to reach the total
💡 Find how much the count grows each step, start from the first one, then multiply and add: 6 + 19 times 3 = 63!
Variant 9 answer: 40 thumbtacks

As shown in the figure, sheets of paper are being pinned to a bulletin board with thumbtacks. How many thumbtacks are needed in all to pin up 1818 sheets?

(Figure) Rectangular sheets of paper are pinned side by side in a single horizontal row, where each pair of neighboring sheets overlaps along its shared edge and uses the same thumbtacks there. A thumbtack is placed at each of the four corners of every sheet, but the thumbtacks along an overlapping edge are shared by the two sheets. Pinning up 11 sheet needs 66 thumbtacks, and each additional sheet needs 22 more thumbtacks.

Show solution

Understand

Sheets of paper are pinned in a single row on a bulletin board. Pinning 1 sheet needs 6 thumbtacks (one at each corner), and each additional sheet shares an edge with its neighbor so it needs only 2 more thumbtacks. We must find how many thumbtacks are needed for 18 sheets.

Givens
  • 1 sheet needs 6 thumbtacks
  • Each additional sheet needs 2 more thumbtacks (corners on the shared edge are reused)
  • There are 18 sheets in a row
Unknowns
  • The total number of thumbtacks for 18 sheets
Constraints
  • Sheets are in one horizontal row
  • Tacks on a shared edge serve both neighboring sheets

Plan

#5 Look for a Pattern · also uses: #9 Solve an Easier Related Problem#1 Draw a Diagram

The figure shows the row growing by one sheet at a time, each adding exactly 2 new tacks. Building small cases reveals the rule 'start with 6, then add 2 for each extra sheet,' which becomes a multiplication-plus-addition expression for any count.

Execute

#9 Solve an Easier Related Problem 3.OA.D.9
Use small cases from the figure: 1 sheet needs 6 tacks; 2 sheets need 6 + 2 = 8; 3 sheets need 6 + 2 + 2 = 10. Each new sheet after the first adds 2 tacks.
$6,\ 8,\ 10,\ \ldots$ (add 2 each time)
Looking at one, two, then three sheets makes the steady jump of 2 easy to spot.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.D.8
After the first sheet there are 18 - 1 = 17 extra sheets, each adding 2 tacks, on top of the starting 6.
6+(181)×26 + (18 - 1) \times 2
The first sheet sets the 6, and every later sheet contributes the same 2 tacks.
#5 Look for a Pattern 3.OA.A.3
Compute the extra tacks then add the starting amount.
6+17×2=6+34=406 + 17 \times 2 = 6 + 34 = 40
17 added sheets bring 34 tacks, plus the original 6 makes 40.
Answer: 40 thumbtacks

Review

Check the rule on a small case: 3 sheets give 6 + 2 times 2 = 10, which matches counting tacks in the figure. For 18 sheets, 40 tacks is between 6 (one sheet) and 18 times 6 = 108 (if none were shared), which is sensible.

Build up by repeated addition: start at 6 for the first sheet, then add 2 for each of the remaining 17 sheets one at a time; this reaches 40 and agrees with the multiplication shortcut.

Standards · min grade 3

  • 3.OA.D.9 Identify arithmetic patterns and explain using properties of operations — Finding the steady increase of 2 tacks per added sheet
  • 3.OA.D.8 Solve two-step word problems using four operations within 100 — Writing the rule as 6 + (18 - 1) times 2 and evaluating it
  • 3.OA.A.3 Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Computing 17 times 2 and adding to reach the total
💡 Find how much the count grows each step, start from the first one, then multiply and add: 6 + 17 times 2 = 40!