Total all categories from a pictograph
3.MD.B.3
Generated variants — 8
A flower shop surveyed the flowers it had by type and showed the results in a pictograph. The flowers will be mixed into bouquets of flowers each, and any leftover flowers will be wrapped one at a time. If of ribbon is needed to make one bouquet and of ribbon is needed to wrap one single flower, how many meters and centimeters of ribbon are needed in all?
Number of Flowers by Type (pictograph)
| Type | Number of flowers |
|---|---|
| Rose | (1 large picture, 8 small pictures) |
| Tulip | (2 large pictures, 2 small pictures) |
| Chrysanthemum | (3 large pictures, 4 small pictures) |
| Lily | (1 large picture, 6 small pictures) |
In the pictograph, each large picture stands for flowers and each small picture stands for flower.
Show solution
Understand
A pictograph gives the count of each flower type (large picture = 10, small picture = 1). All flowers are grouped into bouquets of 5, with leftovers wrapped singly. A bouquet uses 90 cm of ribbon and each single flower uses 20 cm. We find the total ribbon in meters and centimeters.
- Rose 1 large + 8 small, Tulip 2 large + 2 small, Chrysanthemum 3 large + 4 small, Lily 1 large + 6 small.
- 1 large picture = 10 flowers, 1 small picture = 1 flower.
- Bouquet = 5 flowers, uses 90 cm of ribbon; each leftover single flower uses 20 cm.
- 100 cm = 1 m.
- Total ribbon needed, in meters and centimeters.
- Flowers are wrapped 5 per bouquet; the remainder are wrapped one at a time.
- Total ribbon = (bouquets x 90) + (singles x 20).
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units
Several steps chain together: read each flower count, find the grand total, divide by the bouquet size for bouquets and remainder, then combine ribbon lengths and convert to m and cm - watching the cm/m units.
Execute
Review
90 flowers in groups of 5 give 18 bouquets (90 flowers) plus 0 singles = 90, which checks. Ribbon 1620 + 0 = 1620 cm, and 16 m 20 cm = 1620 cm, so the conversion is right.
Make a systematic list (tool 2) of each type's count and a running total before dividing - it confirms the total, then the same division and ribbon arithmetic follow.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading each flower-type count from the large/small symbols.3.NBT.A.2Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Summing the four counts to the total.3.OA.A.3Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Dividing the total by the bouquet size for bouquets/remainder and multiplying ribbon lengths.2.MD.A.1Measure the length of an object by selecting and using appropriate tools — Converting the centimeter total into meters and centimeters.
A flower shop surveyed the flowers it had by type and showed the results in a pictograph. The flowers will be mixed into bouquets of flowers each, and any leftover flowers will be wrapped one at a time. If of ribbon is needed to make one bouquet and of ribbon is needed to wrap one single flower, how many meters and centimeters of ribbon are needed in all?
Number of Flowers by Type (pictograph)
| Type | Number of flowers |
|---|---|
| Rose | (4 large pictures, 0 small pictures) |
| Tulip | (2 large pictures, 6 small pictures) |
| Chrysanthemum | (1 large picture, 3 small pictures) |
| Lily | (3 large pictures, 5 small pictures) |
In the pictograph, each large picture stands for flowers and each small picture stands for flower.
Show solution
Understand
A pictograph gives the count of each flower type (large picture = 10, small picture = 1). All flowers are grouped into bouquets of 8, with leftovers wrapped singly. A bouquet uses 100 cm of ribbon and each single flower uses 30 cm. We find the total ribbon in meters and centimeters.
- Rose 4 large + 0 small, Tulip 2 large + 6 small, Chrysanthemum 1 large + 3 small, Lily 3 large + 5 small.
- 1 large picture = 10 flowers, 1 small picture = 1 flower.
- Bouquet = 8 flowers, uses 100 cm of ribbon; each leftover single flower uses 30 cm.
- 100 cm = 1 m.
- Total ribbon needed, in meters and centimeters.
- Flowers are wrapped 8 per bouquet; the remainder are wrapped one at a time.
- Total ribbon = (bouquets x 100) + (singles x 30).
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units
Several steps chain together: read each flower count, find the grand total, divide by the bouquet size for bouquets and remainder, then combine ribbon lengths and convert to m and cm - watching the cm/m units.
Execute
Review
114 flowers in groups of 8 give 14 bouquets (112 flowers) plus 2 singles = 114, which checks. Ribbon 1400 + 60 = 1460 cm, and 14 m 60 cm = 1460 cm, so the conversion is right.
Make a systematic list (tool 2) of each type's count and a running total before dividing - it confirms the total, then the same division and ribbon arithmetic follow.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading each flower-type count from the large/small symbols.3.NBT.A.2Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Summing the four counts to the total.3.OA.A.3Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Dividing the total by the bouquet size for bouquets/remainder and multiplying ribbon lengths.2.MD.A.1Measure the length of an object by selecting and using appropriate tools — Converting the centimeter total into meters and centimeters.
A flower shop surveyed the flowers it had by type and showed the results in a pictograph. The flowers will be mixed into bouquets of flowers each, and any leftover flowers will be wrapped one at a time. If of ribbon is needed to make one bouquet and of ribbon is needed to wrap one single flower, how many meters and centimeters of ribbon are needed in all?
Number of Flowers by Type (pictograph)
| Type | Number of flowers |
|---|---|
| Rose | (2 large pictures, 5 small pictures) |
| Tulip | (3 large pictures, 2 small pictures) |
| Chrysanthemum | (1 large picture, 4 small pictures) |
| Lily | (1 large picture, 8 small pictures) |
In the pictograph, each large picture stands for flowers and each small picture stands for flower.
Show solution
Understand
A pictograph gives the count of each flower type (large picture = 10, small picture = 1). All flowers are grouped into bouquets of 7, with leftovers wrapped singly. A bouquet uses 85 cm of ribbon and each single flower uses 22 cm. We find the total ribbon in meters and centimeters.
- Rose 2 large + 5 small, Tulip 3 large + 2 small, Chrysanthemum 1 large + 4 small, Lily 1 large + 8 small.
- 1 large picture = 10 flowers, 1 small picture = 1 flower.
- Bouquet = 7 flowers, uses 85 cm of ribbon; each leftover single flower uses 22 cm.
- 100 cm = 1 m.
- Total ribbon needed, in meters and centimeters.
- Flowers are wrapped 7 per bouquet; the remainder are wrapped one at a time.
- Total ribbon = (bouquets x 85) + (singles x 22).
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units
Several steps chain together: read each flower count, find the grand total, divide by the bouquet size for bouquets and remainder, then combine ribbon lengths and convert to m and cm - watching the cm/m units.
Execute
Review
89 flowers in groups of 7 give 12 bouquets (84 flowers) plus 5 singles = 89, which checks. Ribbon 1020 + 110 = 1130 cm, and 11 m 30 cm = 1130 cm, so the conversion is right.
Make a systematic list (tool 2) of each type's count and a running total before dividing - it confirms the total, then the same division and ribbon arithmetic follow.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading each flower-type count from the large/small symbols.3.NBT.A.2Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Summing the four counts to the total.3.OA.A.3Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Dividing the total by the bouquet size for bouquets/remainder and multiplying ribbon lengths.2.MD.A.1Measure the length of an object by selecting and using appropriate tools — Converting the centimeter total into meters and centimeters.
A flower shop surveyed the flowers it had by type and showed the results in a pictograph. The flowers will be mixed into bouquets of flowers each, and any leftover flowers will be wrapped one at a time. If of ribbon is needed to make one bouquet and of ribbon is needed to wrap one single flower, how many meters and centimeters of ribbon are needed in all?
Number of Flowers by Type (pictograph)
| Type | Number of flowers |
|---|---|
| Rose | (1 large picture, 2 small pictures) |
| Tulip | (2 large pictures, 8 small pictures) |
| Chrysanthemum | (3 large pictures, 1 small picture) |
| Lily | (2 large pictures, 6 small pictures) |
In the pictograph, each large picture stands for flowers and each small picture stands for flower.
Show solution
Understand
A pictograph gives the count of each flower type (large picture = 10, small picture = 1). All flowers are grouped into bouquets of 6, with leftovers wrapped singly. A bouquet uses 75 cm of ribbon and each single flower uses 18 cm. We find the total ribbon in meters and centimeters.
- Rose 1 large + 2 small, Tulip 2 large + 8 small, Chrysanthemum 3 large + 1 small, Lily 2 large + 6 small.
- 1 large picture = 10 flowers, 1 small picture = 1 flower.
- Bouquet = 6 flowers, uses 75 cm of ribbon; each leftover single flower uses 18 cm.
- 100 cm = 1 m.
- Total ribbon needed, in meters and centimeters.
- Flowers are wrapped 6 per bouquet; the remainder are wrapped one at a time.
- Total ribbon = (bouquets x 75) + (singles x 18).
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units
Several steps chain together: read each flower count, find the grand total, divide by the bouquet size for bouquets and remainder, then combine ribbon lengths and convert to m and cm - watching the cm/m units.
Execute
Review
97 flowers in groups of 6 give 16 bouquets (96 flowers) plus 1 singles = 97, which checks. Ribbon 1200 + 18 = 1218 cm, and 12 m 18 cm = 1218 cm, so the conversion is right.
Make a systematic list (tool 2) of each type's count and a running total before dividing - it confirms the total, then the same division and ribbon arithmetic follow.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading each flower-type count from the large/small symbols.3.NBT.A.2Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Summing the four counts to the total.3.OA.A.3Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Dividing the total by the bouquet size for bouquets/remainder and multiplying ribbon lengths.2.MD.A.1Measure the length of an object by selecting and using appropriate tools — Converting the centimeter total into meters and centimeters.
A flower shop surveyed the flowers it had by type and showed the results in a pictograph. The flowers will be mixed into bouquets of flowers each, and any leftover flowers will be wrapped one at a time. If of ribbon is needed to make one bouquet and of ribbon is needed to wrap one single flower, how many meters and centimeters of ribbon are needed in all?
Number of Flowers by Type (pictograph)
| Type | Number of flowers |
|---|---|
| Rose | (3 large pictures, 3 small pictures) |
| Tulip | (1 large picture, 1 small picture) |
| Chrysanthemum | (2 large pictures, 7 small pictures) |
| Lily | (2 large pictures, 5 small pictures) |
In the pictograph, each large picture stands for flowers and each small picture stands for flower.
Show solution
Understand
A pictograph gives the count of each flower type (large picture = 10, small picture = 1). All flowers are grouped into bouquets of 9, with leftovers wrapped singly. A bouquet uses 120 cm of ribbon and each single flower uses 35 cm. We find the total ribbon in meters and centimeters.
- Rose 3 large + 3 small, Tulip 1 large + 1 small, Chrysanthemum 2 large + 7 small, Lily 2 large + 5 small.
- 1 large picture = 10 flowers, 1 small picture = 1 flower.
- Bouquet = 9 flowers, uses 120 cm of ribbon; each leftover single flower uses 35 cm.
- 100 cm = 1 m.
- Total ribbon needed, in meters and centimeters.
- Flowers are wrapped 9 per bouquet; the remainder are wrapped one at a time.
- Total ribbon = (bouquets x 120) + (singles x 35).
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units
Several steps chain together: read each flower count, find the grand total, divide by the bouquet size for bouquets and remainder, then combine ribbon lengths and convert to m and cm - watching the cm/m units.
Execute
Review
96 flowers in groups of 9 give 10 bouquets (90 flowers) plus 6 singles = 96, which checks. Ribbon 1200 + 210 = 1410 cm, and 14 m 10 cm = 1410 cm, so the conversion is right.
Make a systematic list (tool 2) of each type's count and a running total before dividing - it confirms the total, then the same division and ribbon arithmetic follow.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading each flower-type count from the large/small symbols.3.NBT.A.2Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Summing the four counts to the total.3.OA.A.3Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Dividing the total by the bouquet size for bouquets/remainder and multiplying ribbon lengths.2.MD.A.1Measure the length of an object by selecting and using appropriate tools — Converting the centimeter total into meters and centimeters.
A flower shop surveyed the flowers it had by type and showed the results in a pictograph. The flowers will be mixed into bouquets of flowers each, and any leftover flowers will be wrapped one at a time. If of ribbon is needed to make one bouquet and of ribbon is needed to wrap one single flower, how many meters and centimeters of ribbon are needed in all?
Number of Flowers by Type (pictograph)
| Type | Number of flowers |
|---|---|
| Rose | (3 large pictures, 2 small pictures) |
| Tulip | (1 large picture, 5 small pictures) |
| Chrysanthemum | (2 large pictures, 1 small picture) |
| Lily | (1 large picture, 9 small pictures) |
In the pictograph, each large picture stands for flowers and each small picture stands for flower.
Show solution
Understand
A pictograph gives the count of each flower type (large picture = 10, small picture = 1). All flowers are grouped into bouquets of 7, with leftovers wrapped singly. A bouquet uses 95 cm of ribbon and each single flower uses 28 cm. We find the total ribbon in meters and centimeters.
- Rose 3 large + 2 small, Tulip 1 large + 5 small, Chrysanthemum 2 large + 1 small, Lily 1 large + 9 small.
- 1 large picture = 10 flowers, 1 small picture = 1 flower.
- Bouquet = 7 flowers, uses 95 cm of ribbon; each leftover single flower uses 28 cm.
- 100 cm = 1 m.
- Total ribbon needed, in meters and centimeters.
- Flowers are wrapped 7 per bouquet; the remainder are wrapped one at a time.
- Total ribbon = (bouquets x 95) + (singles x 28).
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units
Several steps chain together: read each flower count, find the grand total, divide by the bouquet size for bouquets and remainder, then combine ribbon lengths and convert to m and cm - watching the cm/m units.
Execute
Review
87 flowers in groups of 7 give 12 bouquets (84 flowers) plus 3 singles = 87, which checks. Ribbon 1140 + 84 = 1224 cm, and 12 m 24 cm = 1224 cm, so the conversion is right.
Make a systematic list (tool 2) of each type's count and a running total before dividing - it confirms the total, then the same division and ribbon arithmetic follow.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading each flower-type count from the large/small symbols.3.NBT.A.2Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Summing the four counts to the total.3.OA.A.3Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Dividing the total by the bouquet size for bouquets/remainder and multiplying ribbon lengths.2.MD.A.1Measure the length of an object by selecting and using appropriate tools — Converting the centimeter total into meters and centimeters.
A flower shop surveyed the flowers it had by type and showed the results in a pictograph. The flowers will be mixed into bouquets of flowers each, and any leftover flowers will be wrapped one at a time. If of ribbon is needed to make one bouquet and of ribbon is needed to wrap one single flower, how many meters and centimeters of ribbon are needed in all?
Number of Flowers by Type (pictograph)
| Type | Number of flowers |
|---|---|
| Rose | (2 large pictures, 4 small pictures) |
| Tulip | (3 large pictures, 1 small picture) |
| Chrysanthemum | (1 large picture, 7 small pictures) |
| Lily | (2 large pictures, 3 small pictures) |
In the pictograph, each large picture stands for flowers and each small picture stands for flower.
Show solution
Understand
A pictograph gives the count of each flower type (large picture = 10, small picture = 1). All flowers are grouped into bouquets of 6, with leftovers wrapped singly. A bouquet uses 80 cm of ribbon and each single flower uses 25 cm. We find the total ribbon in meters and centimeters.
- Rose 2 large + 4 small, Tulip 3 large + 1 small, Chrysanthemum 1 large + 7 small, Lily 2 large + 3 small.
- 1 large picture = 10 flowers, 1 small picture = 1 flower.
- Bouquet = 6 flowers, uses 80 cm of ribbon; each leftover single flower uses 25 cm.
- 100 cm = 1 m.
- Total ribbon needed, in meters and centimeters.
- Flowers are wrapped 6 per bouquet; the remainder are wrapped one at a time.
- Total ribbon = (bouquets x 80) + (singles x 25).
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units
Several steps chain together: read each flower count, find the grand total, divide by the bouquet size for bouquets and remainder, then combine ribbon lengths and convert to m and cm - watching the cm/m units.
Execute
Review
95 flowers in groups of 6 give 15 bouquets (90 flowers) plus 5 singles = 95, which checks. Ribbon 1200 + 125 = 1325 cm, and 13 m 25 cm = 1325 cm, so the conversion is right.
Make a systematic list (tool 2) of each type's count and a running total before dividing - it confirms the total, then the same division and ribbon arithmetic follow.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading each flower-type count from the large/small symbols.3.NBT.A.2Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Summing the four counts to the total.3.OA.A.3Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Dividing the total by the bouquet size for bouquets/remainder and multiplying ribbon lengths.2.MD.A.1Measure the length of an object by selecting and using appropriate tools — Converting the centimeter total into meters and centimeters.
A flower shop surveyed the flowers it had by type and showed the results in a pictograph. The flowers will be mixed into bouquets of flowers each, and any leftover flowers will be wrapped one at a time. If of ribbon is needed to make one bouquet and of ribbon is needed to wrap one single flower, how many meters and centimeters of ribbon are needed in all?
Number of Flowers by Type (pictograph)
| Type | Number of flowers |
|---|---|
| Rose | (3 large pictures, 0 small pictures) |
| Tulip | (1 large picture, 9 small pictures) |
| Chrysanthemum | (2 large pictures, 3 small pictures) |
| Lily | (3 large pictures, 7 small pictures) |
In the pictograph, each large picture stands for flowers and each small picture stands for flower.
Show solution
Understand
A pictograph gives the count of each flower type (large picture = 10, small picture = 1). All flowers are grouped into bouquets of 8, with leftovers wrapped singly. A bouquet uses 110 cm of ribbon and each single flower uses 24 cm. We find the total ribbon in meters and centimeters.
- Rose 3 large + 0 small, Tulip 1 large + 9 small, Chrysanthemum 2 large + 3 small, Lily 3 large + 7 small.
- 1 large picture = 10 flowers, 1 small picture = 1 flower.
- Bouquet = 8 flowers, uses 110 cm of ribbon; each leftover single flower uses 24 cm.
- 100 cm = 1 m.
- Total ribbon needed, in meters and centimeters.
- Flowers are wrapped 8 per bouquet; the remainder are wrapped one at a time.
- Total ribbon = (bouquets x 110) + (singles x 24).
Plan
#7 Identify Subproblems · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units
Several steps chain together: read each flower count, find the grand total, divide by the bouquet size for bouquets and remainder, then combine ribbon lengths and convert to m and cm - watching the cm/m units.
Execute
Review
109 flowers in groups of 8 give 13 bouquets (104 flowers) plus 5 singles = 109, which checks. Ribbon 1430 + 120 = 1550 cm, and 15 m 50 cm = 1550 cm, so the conversion is right.
Make a systematic list (tool 2) of each type's count and a running total before dividing - it confirms the total, then the same division and ribbon arithmetic follow.
Standards · min grade 3
3.MD.B.3Draw and interpret scaled picture graphs and bar graphs — Reading each flower-type count from the large/small symbols.3.NBT.A.2Fluently add and subtract within 1000 — Summing the four counts to the total.3.OA.A.3Solve multiplication and division word problems within 100 — Dividing the total by the bouquet size for bouquets/remainder and multiplying ribbon lengths.2.MD.A.1Measure the length of an object by selecting and using appropriate tools — Converting the centimeter total into meters and centimeters.