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Slope of a time-distance line graph is speed · 8 practice problems

4.MD.A.25.MD.B.2

Generated variants — 8

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

Variant 1 answer: 45 minutes

The line graph shows the relationship between time and distance for Noah riding a bike to the school that is 33 km away. Find how many minutes Noah spent actually moving on the bike.

The graph is titled "Distance from Home." The horizontal axis is time: the major mark 11 stands for 11 hour, and 11 hour is divided into 44 small squares, so each small square is 1515 minutes. The vertical axis is distance from home in kilometers (km): 00, 11, 22, 33. Starting from (0(0 min, 00 km)), the line rises from 00 km to 11 km over 11 square, then stays flat at 11 km for 22 squares, then rises from 11 km to 22 km over 11 square, then stays flat at 22 km for 11 square, then rises from 22 km to 33 km over 11 square. (Sloped segments are where Noah was riding; flat segments are where the bike had stopped.)

Distance from Home (km) 0 1 2 3 1 (hour)
Show solution

Understand

A time-distance line graph shows Noah biking a total of 3 km. Each small square is 15 minutes. Sloped (rising) parts are riding; flat parts are stopped. I must find how many minutes Noah spent actually moving.

Givens
  • Each small grid square = 15 minutes
  • Sloped (rising) segments mean moving; flat segments mean stopped
  • Rising segments: 0 to 1 km over 1 square(s); 1 to 2 km over 1 square(s); 2 to 3 km over 1 square(s)
  • Flat (stopped) squares total 3
Unknowns
  • Total minutes Noah spent moving on the bike
Constraints
  • Only the sloped segments count as moving time

Plan

#1 Draw a Diagram · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units

I read the graph to separate sloped (moving) squares from flat (stopped) squares, count only the sloped squares, then convert squares to minutes using one square = 15 minutes.

Execute

#1 Draw a Diagram 5.MD.B.2
The sloped (rising) parts cover 1 + 1 + 1 = 3 squares of moving. The flat parts (3 squares) are stops and do not count.
1+1+1=3 squares moving1 + 1 + 1 = 3 \text{ squares moving}
A rising line means distance is changing, so the rider is moving only there.
#8 Analyze the Units 4.MD.A.2
Each square is 15 minutes, so 3 moving squares = 3 x 15 = 45 minutes.
3×15=45 minutes3 \times 15 = 45 \text{ minutes}
Multiplying square-count by minutes-per-square gives total moving time.
Answer: 45 minutes

Review

There are 6 squares of graph time total (3 sloped + 3 flat) = 90 minutes for the whole trip; the moving part is 3 squares = 45 minutes, which is less than the full trip and sensible.

Work it as a subproblem total (tool 7): the whole trip is 90 minutes, stopped time is the 3 flat squares = 45 minutes, so moving = 90 - 45 = 45 minutes - the same answer.

Standards · min grade 5

  • 5.MD.B.2 Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading the graph to tell moving (sloped) from stopped (flat) segments
  • 4.MD.A.2 Solve word problems involving distances, time, liquid volumes, and money — Converting grid squares to minutes of moving time
💡 On a time-distance graph the slanted parts are when you're moving - count those squares and turn them into minutes!
Variant 2 answer: 60 minutes

The line graph shows the relationship between time and distance for Ava riding a bike to her grandma's house that is 55 km away. Find how many minutes Ava spent actually moving on the bike.

The graph is titled "Distance from Home." The horizontal axis is time: the major mark 11 stands for 11 hour, and 11 hour is divided into 44 small squares, so each small square is 1515 minutes. The vertical axis is distance from home in kilometers (km): 00, 11, 22, 33, 44, 55. Starting from (0(0 min, 00 km)), the line rises from 00 km to 22 km over 11 square, then stays flat at 22 km for 33 squares, then rises from 22 km to 33 km over 11 square, then stays flat at 33 km for 11 square, then rises from 33 km to 55 km over 22 squares. (Sloped segments are where Ava was riding; flat segments are where the bike had stopped.)

Distance from Home (km) 0 1 2 3 4 5 1 (hour)
Show solution

Understand

A time-distance line graph shows Ava biking a total of 5 km. Each small square is 15 minutes. Sloped (rising) parts are riding; flat parts are stopped. I must find how many minutes Ava spent actually moving.

Givens
  • Each small grid square = 15 minutes
  • Sloped (rising) segments mean moving; flat segments mean stopped
  • Rising segments: 0 to 2 km over 1 square(s); 2 to 3 km over 1 square(s); 3 to 5 km over 2 square(s)
  • Flat (stopped) squares total 4
Unknowns
  • Total minutes Ava spent moving on the bike
Constraints
  • Only the sloped segments count as moving time

Plan

#1 Draw a Diagram · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units

I read the graph to separate sloped (moving) squares from flat (stopped) squares, count only the sloped squares, then convert squares to minutes using one square = 15 minutes.

Execute

#1 Draw a Diagram 5.MD.B.2
The sloped (rising) parts cover 1 + 1 + 2 = 4 squares of moving. The flat parts (4 squares) are stops and do not count.
1+1+2=4 squares moving1 + 1 + 2 = 4 \text{ squares moving}
A rising line means distance is changing, so the rider is moving only there.
#8 Analyze the Units 4.MD.A.2
Each square is 15 minutes, so 4 moving squares = 4 x 15 = 60 minutes.
4×15=60 minutes4 \times 15 = 60 \text{ minutes}
Multiplying square-count by minutes-per-square gives total moving time.
Answer: 60 minutes

Review

There are 8 squares of graph time total (4 sloped + 4 flat) = 120 minutes for the whole trip; the moving part is 4 squares = 60 minutes, which is less than the full trip and sensible.

Work it as a subproblem total (tool 7): the whole trip is 120 minutes, stopped time is the 4 flat squares = 60 minutes, so moving = 120 - 60 = 60 minutes - the same answer.

Standards · min grade 5

  • 5.MD.B.2 Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading the graph to tell moving (sloped) from stopped (flat) segments
  • 4.MD.A.2 Solve word problems involving distances, time, liquid volumes, and money — Converting grid squares to minutes of moving time
💡 On a time-distance graph the slanted parts are when you're moving - count those squares and turn them into minutes!
Variant 3 answer: 60 minutes

The line graph shows the relationship between time and distance for Leo riding a bike to the park that is 44 km away. Find how many minutes Leo spent actually moving on the bike.

The graph is titled "Distance from Home." The horizontal axis is time: the major mark 11 stands for 11 hour, and 11 hour is divided into 44 small squares, so each small square is 1515 minutes. The vertical axis is distance from home in kilometers (km): 00, 11, 22, 33, 44. Starting from (0(0 min, 00 km)), the line rises from 00 km to 22 km over 22 squares, then stays flat at 22 km for 11 square, then rises from 22 km to 33 km over 11 square, then stays flat at 33 km for 11 square, then rises from 33 km to 44 km over 11 square. (Sloped segments are where Leo was riding; flat segments are where the bike had stopped.)

Distance from Home (km) 0 1 2 3 4 1 (hour)
Show solution

Understand

A time-distance line graph shows Leo biking a total of 4 km. Each small square is 15 minutes. Sloped (rising) parts are riding; flat parts are stopped. I must find how many minutes Leo spent actually moving.

Givens
  • Each small grid square = 15 minutes
  • Sloped (rising) segments mean moving; flat segments mean stopped
  • Rising segments: 0 to 2 km over 2 square(s); 2 to 3 km over 1 square(s); 3 to 4 km over 1 square(s)
  • Flat (stopped) squares total 2
Unknowns
  • Total minutes Leo spent moving on the bike
Constraints
  • Only the sloped segments count as moving time

Plan

#1 Draw a Diagram · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units

I read the graph to separate sloped (moving) squares from flat (stopped) squares, count only the sloped squares, then convert squares to minutes using one square = 15 minutes.

Execute

#1 Draw a Diagram 5.MD.B.2
The sloped (rising) parts cover 2 + 1 + 1 = 4 squares of moving. The flat parts (2 squares) are stops and do not count.
2+1+1=4 squares moving2 + 1 + 1 = 4 \text{ squares moving}
A rising line means distance is changing, so the rider is moving only there.
#8 Analyze the Units 4.MD.A.2
Each square is 15 minutes, so 4 moving squares = 4 x 15 = 60 minutes.
4×15=60 minutes4 \times 15 = 60 \text{ minutes}
Multiplying square-count by minutes-per-square gives total moving time.
Answer: 60 minutes

Review

There are 6 squares of graph time total (4 sloped + 2 flat) = 90 minutes for the whole trip; the moving part is 4 squares = 60 minutes, which is less than the full trip and sensible.

Work it as a subproblem total (tool 7): the whole trip is 90 minutes, stopped time is the 2 flat squares = 30 minutes, so moving = 90 - 30 = 60 minutes - the same answer.

Standards · min grade 5

  • 5.MD.B.2 Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading the graph to tell moving (sloped) from stopped (flat) segments
  • 4.MD.A.2 Solve word problems involving distances, time, liquid volumes, and money — Converting grid squares to minutes of moving time
💡 On a time-distance graph the slanted parts are when you're moving - count those squares and turn them into minutes!
Variant 4 answer: 45 minutes

The line graph shows the relationship between time and distance for Ruby riding a bike to the museum that is 44 km away. Find how many minutes Ruby spent actually moving on the bike.

The graph is titled "Distance from Home." The horizontal axis is time: the major mark 11 stands for 11 hour, and 11 hour is divided into 44 small squares, so each small square is 1515 minutes. The vertical axis is distance from home in kilometers (km): 00, 11, 22, 33, 44. Starting from (0(0 min, 00 km)), the line rises from 00 km to 33 km over 22 squares, then stays flat at 33 km for 11 square, then rises from 33 km to 44 km over 11 square, then stays flat at 44 km for 22 squares. (Sloped segments are where Ruby was riding; flat segments are where the bike had stopped.)

Distance from Home (km) 0 1 2 3 4 1 (hour)
Show solution

Understand

A time-distance line graph shows Ruby biking a total of 4 km. Each small square is 15 minutes. Sloped (rising) parts are riding; flat parts are stopped. I must find how many minutes Ruby spent actually moving.

Givens
  • Each small grid square = 15 minutes
  • Sloped (rising) segments mean moving; flat segments mean stopped
  • Rising segments: 0 to 3 km over 2 square(s); 3 to 4 km over 1 square(s)
  • Flat (stopped) squares total 3
Unknowns
  • Total minutes Ruby spent moving on the bike
Constraints
  • Only the sloped segments count as moving time

Plan

#1 Draw a Diagram · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units

I read the graph to separate sloped (moving) squares from flat (stopped) squares, count only the sloped squares, then convert squares to minutes using one square = 15 minutes.

Execute

#1 Draw a Diagram 5.MD.B.2
The sloped (rising) parts cover 2 + 1 = 3 squares of moving. The flat parts (3 squares) are stops and do not count.
2+1=3 squares moving2 + 1 = 3 \text{ squares moving}
A rising line means distance is changing, so the rider is moving only there.
#8 Analyze the Units 4.MD.A.2
Each square is 15 minutes, so 3 moving squares = 3 x 15 = 45 minutes.
3×15=45 minutes3 \times 15 = 45 \text{ minutes}
Multiplying square-count by minutes-per-square gives total moving time.
Answer: 45 minutes

Review

There are 6 squares of graph time total (3 sloped + 3 flat) = 90 minutes for the whole trip; the moving part is 3 squares = 45 minutes, which is less than the full trip and sensible.

Work it as a subproblem total (tool 7): the whole trip is 90 minutes, stopped time is the 3 flat squares = 45 minutes, so moving = 90 - 45 = 45 minutes - the same answer.

Standards · min grade 5

  • 5.MD.B.2 Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading the graph to tell moving (sloped) from stopped (flat) segments
  • 4.MD.A.2 Solve word problems involving distances, time, liquid volumes, and money — Converting grid squares to minutes of moving time
💡 On a time-distance graph the slanted parts are when you're moving - count those squares and turn them into minutes!
Variant 5 answer: 60 minutes

The line graph shows the relationship between time and distance for Sam riding a bike to the pool that is 44 km away. Find how many minutes Sam spent actually moving on the bike.

The graph is titled "Distance from Home." The horizontal axis is time: the major mark 11 stands for 11 hour, and 11 hour is divided into 44 small squares, so each small square is 1515 minutes. The vertical axis is distance from home in kilometers (km): 00, 11, 22, 33, 44. Starting from (0(0 min, 00 km)), the line rises from 00 km to 11 km over 11 square, then stays flat at 11 km for 11 square, then rises from 11 km to 22 km over 11 square, then stays flat at 22 km for 11 square, then rises from 22 km to 44 km over 22 squares. (Sloped segments are where Sam was riding; flat segments are where the bike had stopped.)

Distance from Home (km) 0 1 2 3 4 1 (hour)
Show solution

Understand

A time-distance line graph shows Sam biking a total of 4 km. Each small square is 15 minutes. Sloped (rising) parts are riding; flat parts are stopped. I must find how many minutes Sam spent actually moving.

Givens
  • Each small grid square = 15 minutes
  • Sloped (rising) segments mean moving; flat segments mean stopped
  • Rising segments: 0 to 1 km over 1 square(s); 1 to 2 km over 1 square(s); 2 to 4 km over 2 square(s)
  • Flat (stopped) squares total 2
Unknowns
  • Total minutes Sam spent moving on the bike
Constraints
  • Only the sloped segments count as moving time

Plan

#1 Draw a Diagram · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units

I read the graph to separate sloped (moving) squares from flat (stopped) squares, count only the sloped squares, then convert squares to minutes using one square = 15 minutes.

Execute

#1 Draw a Diagram 5.MD.B.2
The sloped (rising) parts cover 1 + 1 + 2 = 4 squares of moving. The flat parts (2 squares) are stops and do not count.
1+1+2=4 squares moving1 + 1 + 2 = 4 \text{ squares moving}
A rising line means distance is changing, so the rider is moving only there.
#8 Analyze the Units 4.MD.A.2
Each square is 15 minutes, so 4 moving squares = 4 x 15 = 60 minutes.
4×15=60 minutes4 \times 15 = 60 \text{ minutes}
Multiplying square-count by minutes-per-square gives total moving time.
Answer: 60 minutes

Review

There are 6 squares of graph time total (4 sloped + 2 flat) = 90 minutes for the whole trip; the moving part is 4 squares = 60 minutes, which is less than the full trip and sensible.

Work it as a subproblem total (tool 7): the whole trip is 90 minutes, stopped time is the 2 flat squares = 30 minutes, so moving = 90 - 30 = 60 minutes - the same answer.

Standards · min grade 5

  • 5.MD.B.2 Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading the graph to tell moving (sloped) from stopped (flat) segments
  • 4.MD.A.2 Solve word problems involving distances, time, liquid volumes, and money — Converting grid squares to minutes of moving time
💡 On a time-distance graph the slanted parts are when you're moving - count those squares and turn them into minutes!
Variant 6 answer: 60 minutes

The line graph shows the relationship between time and distance for Ivy riding a bike to the market that is 44 km away. Find how many minutes Ivy spent actually moving on the bike.

The graph is titled "Distance from Home." The horizontal axis is time: the major mark 11 stands for 11 hour, and 11 hour is divided into 44 small squares, so each small square is 1515 minutes. The vertical axis is distance from home in kilometers (km): 00, 11, 22, 33, 44. Starting from (0(0 min, 00 km)), the line rises from 00 km to 22 km over 11 square, then stays flat at 22 km for 11 square, then rises from 22 km to 33 km over 22 squares, then stays flat at 33 km for 11 square, then rises from 33 km to 44 km over 11 square. (Sloped segments are where Ivy was riding; flat segments are where the bike had stopped.)

Distance from Home (km) 0 1 2 3 4 1 (hour)
Show solution

Understand

A time-distance line graph shows Ivy biking a total of 4 km. Each small square is 15 minutes. Sloped (rising) parts are riding; flat parts are stopped. I must find how many minutes Ivy spent actually moving.

Givens
  • Each small grid square = 15 minutes
  • Sloped (rising) segments mean moving; flat segments mean stopped
  • Rising segments: 0 to 2 km over 1 square(s); 2 to 3 km over 2 square(s); 3 to 4 km over 1 square(s)
  • Flat (stopped) squares total 2
Unknowns
  • Total minutes Ivy spent moving on the bike
Constraints
  • Only the sloped segments count as moving time

Plan

#1 Draw a Diagram · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units

I read the graph to separate sloped (moving) squares from flat (stopped) squares, count only the sloped squares, then convert squares to minutes using one square = 15 minutes.

Execute

#1 Draw a Diagram 5.MD.B.2
The sloped (rising) parts cover 1 + 2 + 1 = 4 squares of moving. The flat parts (2 squares) are stops and do not count.
1+2+1=4 squares moving1 + 2 + 1 = 4 \text{ squares moving}
A rising line means distance is changing, so the rider is moving only there.
#8 Analyze the Units 4.MD.A.2
Each square is 15 minutes, so 4 moving squares = 4 x 15 = 60 minutes.
4×15=60 minutes4 \times 15 = 60 \text{ minutes}
Multiplying square-count by minutes-per-square gives total moving time.
Answer: 60 minutes

Review

There are 6 squares of graph time total (4 sloped + 2 flat) = 90 minutes for the whole trip; the moving part is 4 squares = 60 minutes, which is less than the full trip and sensible.

Work it as a subproblem total (tool 7): the whole trip is 90 minutes, stopped time is the 2 flat squares = 30 minutes, so moving = 90 - 30 = 60 minutes - the same answer.

Standards · min grade 5

  • 5.MD.B.2 Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading the graph to tell moving (sloped) from stopped (flat) segments
  • 4.MD.A.2 Solve word problems involving distances, time, liquid volumes, and money — Converting grid squares to minutes of moving time
💡 On a time-distance graph the slanted parts are when you're moving - count those squares and turn them into minutes!
Variant 7 answer: 60 minutes

The line graph shows the relationship between time and distance for Mia riding a bike to the library that is 44 km away. Find how many minutes Mia spent actually moving on the bike.

The graph is titled "Distance from Home." The horizontal axis is time: the major mark 11 stands for 11 hour, and 11 hour is divided into 44 small squares, so each small square is 1515 minutes. The vertical axis is distance from home in kilometers (km): 00, 11, 22, 33, 44. Starting from (0(0 min, 00 km)), the line rises from 00 km to 11 km over 11 square, then stays flat at 11 km for 11 square, then rises from 11 km to 33 km over 22 squares, then stays flat at 33 km for 22 squares, then rises from 33 km to 44 km over 11 square. (Sloped segments are where Mia was riding; flat segments are where the bike had stopped.)

Distance from Home (km) 0 1 2 3 4 1 (hour)
Show solution

Understand

A time-distance line graph shows Mia biking a total of 4 km. Each small square is 15 minutes. Sloped (rising) parts are riding; flat parts are stopped. I must find how many minutes Mia spent actually moving.

Givens
  • Each small grid square = 15 minutes
  • Sloped (rising) segments mean moving; flat segments mean stopped
  • Rising segments: 0 to 1 km over 1 square(s); 1 to 3 km over 2 square(s); 3 to 4 km over 1 square(s)
  • Flat (stopped) squares total 3
Unknowns
  • Total minutes Mia spent moving on the bike
Constraints
  • Only the sloped segments count as moving time

Plan

#1 Draw a Diagram · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units

I read the graph to separate sloped (moving) squares from flat (stopped) squares, count only the sloped squares, then convert squares to minutes using one square = 15 minutes.

Execute

#1 Draw a Diagram 5.MD.B.2
The sloped (rising) parts cover 1 + 2 + 1 = 4 squares of moving. The flat parts (3 squares) are stops and do not count.
1+2+1=4 squares moving1 + 2 + 1 = 4 \text{ squares moving}
A rising line means distance is changing, so the rider is moving only there.
#8 Analyze the Units 4.MD.A.2
Each square is 15 minutes, so 4 moving squares = 4 x 15 = 60 minutes.
4×15=60 minutes4 \times 15 = 60 \text{ minutes}
Multiplying square-count by minutes-per-square gives total moving time.
Answer: 60 minutes

Review

There are 7 squares of graph time total (4 sloped + 3 flat) = 105 minutes for the whole trip; the moving part is 4 squares = 60 minutes, which is less than the full trip and sensible.

Work it as a subproblem total (tool 7): the whole trip is 105 minutes, stopped time is the 3 flat squares = 45 minutes, so moving = 105 - 45 = 60 minutes - the same answer.

Standards · min grade 5

  • 5.MD.B.2 Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading the graph to tell moving (sloped) from stopped (flat) segments
  • 4.MD.A.2 Solve word problems involving distances, time, liquid volumes, and money — Converting grid squares to minutes of moving time
💡 On a time-distance graph the slanted parts are when you're moving - count those squares and turn them into minutes!
Variant 8 answer: 45 minutes

The line graph shows the relationship between time and distance for Owen riding a bike to a friend's house that is 44 km away. Find how many minutes Owen spent actually moving on the bike.

The graph is titled "Distance from Home." The horizontal axis is time: the major mark 11 stands for 11 hour, and 11 hour is divided into 44 small squares, so each small square is 1515 minutes. The vertical axis is distance from home in kilometers (km): 00, 11, 22, 33, 44. Starting from (0(0 min, 00 km)), the line rises from 00 km to 22 km over 11 square, then stays flat at 22 km for 22 squares, then rises from 22 km to 33 km over 11 square, then stays flat at 33 km for 11 square, then rises from 33 km to 44 km over 11 square. (Sloped segments are where Owen was riding; flat segments are where the bike had stopped.)

Distance from Home (km) 0 1 2 3 4 1 (hour)
Show solution

Understand

A time-distance line graph shows Owen biking a total of 4 km. Each small square is 15 minutes. Sloped (rising) parts are riding; flat parts are stopped. I must find how many minutes Owen spent actually moving.

Givens
  • Each small grid square = 15 minutes
  • Sloped (rising) segments mean moving; flat segments mean stopped
  • Rising segments: 0 to 2 km over 1 square(s); 2 to 3 km over 1 square(s); 3 to 4 km over 1 square(s)
  • Flat (stopped) squares total 3
Unknowns
  • Total minutes Owen spent moving on the bike
Constraints
  • Only the sloped segments count as moving time

Plan

#1 Draw a Diagram · also uses: #8 Analyze the Units

I read the graph to separate sloped (moving) squares from flat (stopped) squares, count only the sloped squares, then convert squares to minutes using one square = 15 minutes.

Execute

#1 Draw a Diagram 5.MD.B.2
The sloped (rising) parts cover 1 + 1 + 1 = 3 squares of moving. The flat parts (3 squares) are stops and do not count.
1+1+1=3 squares moving1 + 1 + 1 = 3 \text{ squares moving}
A rising line means distance is changing, so the rider is moving only there.
#8 Analyze the Units 4.MD.A.2
Each square is 15 minutes, so 3 moving squares = 3 x 15 = 45 minutes.
3×15=45 minutes3 \times 15 = 45 \text{ minutes}
Multiplying square-count by minutes-per-square gives total moving time.
Answer: 45 minutes

Review

There are 6 squares of graph time total (3 sloped + 3 flat) = 90 minutes for the whole trip; the moving part is 3 squares = 45 minutes, which is less than the full trip and sensible.

Work it as a subproblem total (tool 7): the whole trip is 90 minutes, stopped time is the 3 flat squares = 45 minutes, so moving = 90 - 45 = 45 minutes - the same answer.

Standards · min grade 5

  • 5.MD.B.2 Make a line plot to display a data set and solve problems using the data — Reading the graph to tell moving (sloped) from stopped (flat) segments
  • 4.MD.A.2 Solve word problems involving distances, time, liquid volumes, and money — Converting grid squares to minutes of moving time
💡 On a time-distance graph the slanted parts are when you're moving - count those squares and turn them into minutes!