I have a daughter in 3rd grade. Her homework tonight has several questions that I believe to be incomplete or utterly wrong. I would love to see how the great state of CA expects these to be answered, but I cannot find an answer key online, only a home study guide. The homework is Houghton Mifflin 3rd grade chapter 13 lesson 4 "Dividing by 9". I am a perfectly functioning adult who can divide by 9, but I cannot figure out the wording of these questions. The questions surround a kid named Raul and his bookshelf. The information you need is the types of books he has and the amount of each. That information is as follows:
History 72
Art 81
Science 54
Travel 63
Fiction 90
Biography 45
Poetry 27
Cooking 36
Question 1
Raul might put an equal number of each kind of book on 9 shelves. How many types of books will have an even number on each shelf?
My attemtped answer = WTH are they asking?
Question 2
Raul considered combining two of the subjects and placing 9 books on each shelf. It would take 7 shelves to do this. What were the two subjects?
My attempted answer = Cooking and Poetry, but this was confusing as crap because you essentially just have to start adding random subjects together until you get two that equally add up to 63. It wasn't hard for me, but it was for her.
Question 3
How many books would Raul have to buy if he wanted to have 10 books on each shelf, no matter what the subject?
My attempted answer = WTH are they asking? How many shelves are there in this particular scenario? Why would he need to "buy" more books? He has plenty books to fit 10 books on 1 shelf, 2 shelves, 3, etc. He has 468 books total so he could only put up to 10 books per shelf for 46 shelves. How am I to know how many shelves they are wanting for this scenario? 9, 7 as in the previous two questions. In each previous question they have provided the number of shelves they wish for that scenario, but not this question.
Why is the state of CA TRYING to make math frustrating for my 8 year old. A conspiracy perhaps???????
History 72
Art 81
Science 54
Travel 63
Fiction 90
Biography 45
Poetry 27
Cooking 36
Question 1
Raul might put an equal number of each kind of book on 9 shelves. How many types of books will have an even number on each shelf?
My attemtped answer = WTH are they asking?
Question 2
Raul considered combining two of the subjects and placing 9 books on each shelf. It would take 7 shelves to do this. What were the two subjects?
My attempted answer = Cooking and Poetry, but this was confusing as crap because you essentially just have to start adding random subjects together until you get two that equally add up to 63. It wasn't hard for me, but it was for her.
Question 3
How many books would Raul have to buy if he wanted to have 10 books on each shelf, no matter what the subject?
My attempted answer = WTH are they asking? How many shelves are there in this particular scenario? Why would he need to "buy" more books? He has plenty books to fit 10 books on 1 shelf, 2 shelves, 3, etc. He has 468 books total so he could only put up to 10 books per shelf for 46 shelves. How am I to know how many shelves they are wanting for this scenario? 9, 7 as in the previous two questions. In each previous question they have provided the number of shelves they wish for that scenario, but not this question.
Why is the state of CA TRYING to make math frustrating for my 8 year old. A conspiracy perhaps???????