The whole is one; find the remaining fraction
3.NF.A.13.NF.A.3
Generated variants — 12
Sea spent of the money she had on snacks, then spent of what was left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction, what part of the money she started with is left.
Show solution
Understand
Sea spends 5/12 of her money on snacks, then spends 2/7 of what is left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction of the money she started with, how much is left.
- The starting amount of money counts as the whole, 1
- She spends 5/12 of the whole on snacks
- Then she spends 2/7 of what remains on school supplies
- The fraction of the original money that is left at the end
- The whole is 1
- The 2/7 is taken from the remainder after snacks, not from the original whole
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Solve it in stages: first the money left after snacks (whole minus 5/12), then the fraction of that remainder still left after spending 2/7 of it. A bar model makes the 'fraction of what is left' step clear.
Execute
Review
After snacks 7/12 remains; she then spends a bit more, so the final amount must be less than 7/12. The answer 5/12 is less than 7/12 and still positive, which fits. Check: spent 5/12 on snacks plus 2/12 on supplies (2/7 of 7/12) = 7/12 spent, leaving 5/12.
Work it as parts of 12ths (tool 15): the 7/12 left is 7 12ths; spending 2/7 of those 7 12ths means spending exactly 2 12ths, so 7/12 - 2/12 = 5/12 remains.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NF.A.1Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Taking 5/7 of the 7/12 remainder as 5 equal parts of 1/123.NF.A.3Explain equivalence of fractions and compare fractions by reasoning — Computing 1 - 5/12 = 7/12 with the whole written as 12/12
Sea spent of the money she had on snacks, then spent of what was left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction, what part of the money she started with is left.
Show solution
Understand
Sea spends 4/11 of her money on snacks, then spends 5/7 of what is left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction of the money she started with, how much is left.
- The starting amount of money counts as the whole, 1
- She spends 4/11 of the whole on snacks
- Then she spends 5/7 of what remains on school supplies
- The fraction of the original money that is left at the end
- The whole is 1
- The 5/7 is taken from the remainder after snacks, not from the original whole
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Solve it in stages: first the money left after snacks (whole minus 4/11), then the fraction of that remainder still left after spending 5/7 of it. A bar model makes the 'fraction of what is left' step clear.
Execute
Review
After snacks 7/11 remains; she then spends a bit more, so the final amount must be less than 7/11. The answer 2/11 is less than 7/11 and still positive, which fits. Check: spent 4/11 on snacks plus 5/11 on supplies (5/7 of 7/11) = 9/11 spent, leaving 2/11.
Work it as parts of 11ths (tool 15): the 7/11 left is 7 11ths; spending 5/7 of those 7 11ths means spending exactly 5 11ths, so 7/11 - 5/11 = 2/11 remains.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NF.A.1Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Taking 2/7 of the 7/11 remainder as 2 equal parts of 1/113.NF.A.3Explain equivalence of fractions and compare fractions by reasoning — Computing 1 - 4/11 = 7/11 with the whole written as 11/11
Sea spent of the money she had on snacks, then spent of what was left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction, what part of the money she started with is left.
Show solution
Understand
Sea spends 4/10 of her money on snacks, then spends 2/6 of what is left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction of the money she started with, how much is left.
- The starting amount of money counts as the whole, 1
- She spends 4/10 of the whole on snacks
- Then she spends 2/6 of what remains on school supplies
- The fraction of the original money that is left at the end
- The whole is 1
- The 2/6 is taken from the remainder after snacks, not from the original whole
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Solve it in stages: first the money left after snacks (whole minus 4/10), then the fraction of that remainder still left after spending 2/6 of it. A bar model makes the 'fraction of what is left' step clear.
Execute
Review
After snacks 6/10 remains; she then spends a bit more, so the final amount must be less than 6/10. The answer 4/10 is less than 6/10 and still positive, which fits. Check: spent 4/10 on snacks plus 2/10 on supplies (2/6 of 6/10) = 6/10 spent, leaving 4/10.
Work it as parts of 10ths (tool 15): the 6/10 left is 6 10ths; spending 2/6 of those 6 10ths means spending exactly 2 10ths, so 6/10 - 2/10 = 4/10 remains.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NF.A.1Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Taking 4/6 of the 6/10 remainder as 4 equal parts of 1/103.NF.A.3Explain equivalence of fractions and compare fractions by reasoning — Computing 1 - 4/10 = 6/10 with the whole written as 10/10
Sea spent of the money she had on snacks, then spent of what was left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction, what part of the money she started with is left.
Show solution
Understand
Sea spends 8/20 of her money on snacks, then spends 5/12 of what is left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction of the money she started with, how much is left.
- The starting amount of money counts as the whole, 1
- She spends 8/20 of the whole on snacks
- Then she spends 5/12 of what remains on school supplies
- The fraction of the original money that is left at the end
- The whole is 1
- The 5/12 is taken from the remainder after snacks, not from the original whole
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Solve it in stages: first the money left after snacks (whole minus 8/20), then the fraction of that remainder still left after spending 5/12 of it. A bar model makes the 'fraction of what is left' step clear.
Execute
Review
After snacks 12/20 remains; she then spends a bit more, so the final amount must be less than 12/20. The answer 7/20 is less than 12/20 and still positive, which fits. Check: spent 8/20 on snacks plus 5/20 on supplies (5/12 of 12/20) = 13/20 spent, leaving 7/20.
Work it as parts of 20ths (tool 15): the 12/20 left is 12 20ths; spending 5/12 of those 12 20ths means spending exactly 5 20ths, so 12/20 - 5/20 = 7/20 remains.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NF.A.1Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Taking 7/12 of the 12/20 remainder as 7 equal parts of 1/203.NF.A.3Explain equivalence of fractions and compare fractions by reasoning — Computing 1 - 8/20 = 12/20 with the whole written as 20/20
Sea spent of the money she had on snacks, then spent of what was left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction, what part of the money she started with is left.
Show solution
Understand
Sea spends 3/10 of her money on snacks, then spends 4/7 of what is left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction of the money she started with, how much is left.
- The starting amount of money counts as the whole, 1
- She spends 3/10 of the whole on snacks
- Then she spends 4/7 of what remains on school supplies
- The fraction of the original money that is left at the end
- The whole is 1
- The 4/7 is taken from the remainder after snacks, not from the original whole
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Solve it in stages: first the money left after snacks (whole minus 3/10), then the fraction of that remainder still left after spending 4/7 of it. A bar model makes the 'fraction of what is left' step clear.
Execute
Review
After snacks 7/10 remains; she then spends a bit more, so the final amount must be less than 7/10. The answer 3/10 is less than 7/10 and still positive, which fits. Check: spent 3/10 on snacks plus 4/10 on supplies (4/7 of 7/10) = 7/10 spent, leaving 3/10.
Work it as parts of 10ths (tool 15): the 7/10 left is 7 10ths; spending 4/7 of those 7 10ths means spending exactly 4 10ths, so 7/10 - 4/10 = 3/10 remains.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NF.A.1Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Taking 3/7 of the 7/10 remainder as 3 equal parts of 1/103.NF.A.3Explain equivalence of fractions and compare fractions by reasoning — Computing 1 - 3/10 = 7/10 with the whole written as 10/10
Sea spent of the money she had on snacks, then spent of what was left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction, what part of the money she started with is left.
Show solution
Understand
Sea spends 3/14 of her money on snacks, then spends 7/11 of what is left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction of the money she started with, how much is left.
- The starting amount of money counts as the whole, 1
- She spends 3/14 of the whole on snacks
- Then she spends 7/11 of what remains on school supplies
- The fraction of the original money that is left at the end
- The whole is 1
- The 7/11 is taken from the remainder after snacks, not from the original whole
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Solve it in stages: first the money left after snacks (whole minus 3/14), then the fraction of that remainder still left after spending 7/11 of it. A bar model makes the 'fraction of what is left' step clear.
Execute
Review
After snacks 11/14 remains; she then spends a bit more, so the final amount must be less than 11/14. The answer 4/14 is less than 11/14 and still positive, which fits. Check: spent 3/14 on snacks plus 7/14 on supplies (7/11 of 11/14) = 10/14 spent, leaving 4/14.
Work it as parts of 14ths (tool 15): the 11/14 left is 11 14ths; spending 7/11 of those 11 14ths means spending exactly 7 14ths, so 11/14 - 7/14 = 4/14 remains.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NF.A.1Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Taking 4/11 of the 11/14 remainder as 4 equal parts of 1/143.NF.A.3Explain equivalence of fractions and compare fractions by reasoning — Computing 1 - 3/14 = 11/14 with the whole written as 14/14
Sea spent of the money she had on snacks, then spent of what was left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction, what part of the money she started with is left.
Show solution
Understand
Sea spends 2/7 of her money on snacks, then spends 3/5 of what is left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction of the money she started with, how much is left.
- The starting amount of money counts as the whole, 1
- She spends 2/7 of the whole on snacks
- Then she spends 3/5 of what remains on school supplies
- The fraction of the original money that is left at the end
- The whole is 1
- The 3/5 is taken from the remainder after snacks, not from the original whole
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Solve it in stages: first the money left after snacks (whole minus 2/7), then the fraction of that remainder still left after spending 3/5 of it. A bar model makes the 'fraction of what is left' step clear.
Execute
Review
After snacks 5/7 remains; she then spends a bit more, so the final amount must be less than 5/7. The answer 2/7 is less than 5/7 and still positive, which fits. Check: spent 2/7 on snacks plus 3/7 on supplies (3/5 of 5/7) = 5/7 spent, leaving 2/7.
Work it as parts of 7ths (tool 15): the 5/7 left is 5 7ths; spending 3/5 of those 5 7ths means spending exactly 3 7ths, so 5/7 - 3/7 = 2/7 remains.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NF.A.1Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Taking 2/5 of the 5/7 remainder as 2 equal parts of 1/73.NF.A.3Explain equivalence of fractions and compare fractions by reasoning — Computing 1 - 2/7 = 5/7 with the whole written as 7/7
Sea spent of the money she had on snacks, then spent of what was left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction, what part of the money she started with is left.
Show solution
Understand
Sea spends 2/9 of her money on snacks, then spends 3/7 of what is left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction of the money she started with, how much is left.
- The starting amount of money counts as the whole, 1
- She spends 2/9 of the whole on snacks
- Then she spends 3/7 of what remains on school supplies
- The fraction of the original money that is left at the end
- The whole is 1
- The 3/7 is taken from the remainder after snacks, not from the original whole
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Solve it in stages: first the money left after snacks (whole minus 2/9), then the fraction of that remainder still left after spending 3/7 of it. A bar model makes the 'fraction of what is left' step clear.
Execute
Review
After snacks 7/9 remains; she then spends a bit more, so the final amount must be less than 7/9. The answer 4/9 is less than 7/9 and still positive, which fits. Check: spent 2/9 on snacks plus 3/9 on supplies (3/7 of 7/9) = 5/9 spent, leaving 4/9.
Work it as parts of 9ths (tool 15): the 7/9 left is 7 9ths; spending 3/7 of those 7 9ths means spending exactly 3 9ths, so 7/9 - 3/9 = 4/9 remains.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NF.A.1Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Taking 4/7 of the 7/9 remainder as 4 equal parts of 1/93.NF.A.3Explain equivalence of fractions and compare fractions by reasoning — Computing 1 - 2/9 = 7/9 with the whole written as 9/9
Sea spent of the money she had on snacks, then spent of what was left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction, what part of the money she started with is left.
Show solution
Understand
Sea spends 7/15 of her money on snacks, then spends 6/8 of what is left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction of the money she started with, how much is left.
- The starting amount of money counts as the whole, 1
- She spends 7/15 of the whole on snacks
- Then she spends 6/8 of what remains on school supplies
- The fraction of the original money that is left at the end
- The whole is 1
- The 6/8 is taken from the remainder after snacks, not from the original whole
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Solve it in stages: first the money left after snacks (whole minus 7/15), then the fraction of that remainder still left after spending 6/8 of it. A bar model makes the 'fraction of what is left' step clear.
Execute
Review
After snacks 8/15 remains; she then spends a bit more, so the final amount must be less than 8/15. The answer 2/15 is less than 8/15 and still positive, which fits. Check: spent 7/15 on snacks plus 6/15 on supplies (6/8 of 8/15) = 13/15 spent, leaving 2/15.
Work it as parts of 15ths (tool 15): the 8/15 left is 8 15ths; spending 6/8 of those 8 15ths means spending exactly 6 15ths, so 8/15 - 6/15 = 2/15 remains.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NF.A.1Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Taking 2/8 of the 8/15 remainder as 2 equal parts of 1/153.NF.A.3Explain equivalence of fractions and compare fractions by reasoning — Computing 1 - 7/15 = 8/15 with the whole written as 15/15
Sea spent of the money she had on snacks, then spent of what was left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction, what part of the money she started with is left.
Show solution
Understand
Sea spends 5/16 of her money on snacks, then spends 8/11 of what is left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction of the money she started with, how much is left.
- The starting amount of money counts as the whole, 1
- She spends 5/16 of the whole on snacks
- Then she spends 8/11 of what remains on school supplies
- The fraction of the original money that is left at the end
- The whole is 1
- The 8/11 is taken from the remainder after snacks, not from the original whole
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Solve it in stages: first the money left after snacks (whole minus 5/16), then the fraction of that remainder still left after spending 8/11 of it. A bar model makes the 'fraction of what is left' step clear.
Execute
Review
After snacks 11/16 remains; she then spends a bit more, so the final amount must be less than 11/16. The answer 3/16 is less than 11/16 and still positive, which fits. Check: spent 5/16 on snacks plus 8/16 on supplies (8/11 of 11/16) = 13/16 spent, leaving 3/16.
Work it as parts of 16ths (tool 15): the 11/16 left is 11 16ths; spending 8/11 of those 11 16ths means spending exactly 8 16ths, so 11/16 - 8/16 = 3/16 remains.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NF.A.1Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Taking 3/11 of the 11/16 remainder as 3 equal parts of 1/163.NF.A.3Explain equivalence of fractions and compare fractions by reasoning — Computing 1 - 5/16 = 11/16 with the whole written as 16/16
Sea spent of the money she had on snacks, then spent of what was left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction, what part of the money she started with is left.
Show solution
Understand
Sea spends 6/13 of her money on snacks, then spends 2/7 of what is left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction of the money she started with, how much is left.
- The starting amount of money counts as the whole, 1
- She spends 6/13 of the whole on snacks
- Then she spends 2/7 of what remains on school supplies
- The fraction of the original money that is left at the end
- The whole is 1
- The 2/7 is taken from the remainder after snacks, not from the original whole
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Solve it in stages: first the money left after snacks (whole minus 6/13), then the fraction of that remainder still left after spending 2/7 of it. A bar model makes the 'fraction of what is left' step clear.
Execute
Review
After snacks 7/13 remains; she then spends a bit more, so the final amount must be less than 7/13. The answer 5/13 is less than 7/13 and still positive, which fits. Check: spent 6/13 on snacks plus 2/13 on supplies (2/7 of 7/13) = 8/13 spent, leaving 5/13.
Work it as parts of 13ths (tool 15): the 7/13 left is 7 13ths; spending 2/7 of those 7 13ths means spending exactly 2 13ths, so 7/13 - 2/13 = 5/13 remains.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NF.A.1Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Taking 5/7 of the 7/13 remainder as 5 equal parts of 1/133.NF.A.3Explain equivalence of fractions and compare fractions by reasoning — Computing 1 - 6/13 = 7/13 with the whole written as 13/13
Sea spent of the money she had on snacks, then spent of what was left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction, what part of the money she started with is left.
Show solution
Understand
Sea spends 1/8 of her money on snacks, then spends 4/7 of what is left on school supplies. Write, as a fraction of the money she started with, how much is left.
- The starting amount of money counts as the whole, 1
- She spends 1/8 of the whole on snacks
- Then she spends 4/7 of what remains on school supplies
- The fraction of the original money that is left at the end
- The whole is 1
- The 4/7 is taken from the remainder after snacks, not from the original whole
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #1 Draw a Diagram
Solve it in stages: first the money left after snacks (whole minus 1/8), then the fraction of that remainder still left after spending 4/7 of it. A bar model makes the 'fraction of what is left' step clear.
Execute
Review
After snacks 7/8 remains; she then spends a bit more, so the final amount must be less than 7/8. The answer 3/8 is less than 7/8 and still positive, which fits. Check: spent 1/8 on snacks plus 4/8 on supplies (4/7 of 7/8) = 5/8 spent, leaving 3/8.
Work it as parts of 8ths (tool 15): the 7/8 left is 7 8ths; spending 4/7 of those 7 8ths means spending exactly 4 8ths, so 7/8 - 4/8 = 3/8 remains.
Standards · min grade 3
3.NF.A.1Understand a fraction as quantity formed by parts of a whole — Taking 3/7 of the 7/8 remainder as 3 equal parts of 1/83.NF.A.3Explain equivalence of fractions and compare fractions by reasoning — Computing 1 - 1/8 = 7/8 with the whole written as 8/8