▸Every Valentines, Jerry would get a certain amount of chocolates from his two friends, Quacky and Nibbles. 2n
▸For three years, Jerry didn’t eat any of his precious chocolates and kept them in a cute little jar. 3(2n)
▸But every Valentines day, Tom would steal 5 chocolates from Jerry and give it to his girl friend, Toodles. 5 chocolate for 3 years equal 15 chocolates because 3 times 5 is 15. 3(2n)-15
▸After 3 years, Jerry decided to take the chocolate out of his jar and count them. There were exactly 39 chocolates. 3(2n)-15=39
▸Now, Jerry is wondering how much chocolate Quacky and Nibbles gave him. So he decides to do some math.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Math Time = Solving Time
3(2n)-15=39 ▸First, you have to 3 times 2n because in order of operations, Parenthesis comes first. (PEMDAS)
6n-15=39 ▸Now, you have to make the variables become lonely because you are a nasty bully! (Just like Tom) So what do you do? You add 15 to -15. Oh, and what you do here, you do it to the other side too.
6n=54 ▸Now, you have to divide! What is 54 dived by 6? Well, it is 9 because 6 times 9 is 54!
n=9 ▸Ta-da! Now Jerry knows how much chocolates Quacky and Nibbles gave. Quacky and Nibbles gave 9, and 18 in total to Jerry.
(Story Only Ver.) Every Valentines day, Jerry would get a certain amount of chocolates from his two friends, Quacky and Nibbles. For three years, Jerry didn’t eat any of his precious chocolates and kept them in a cute little jar. But every Valentines day, Tom would steal 5 chocolates from Jerry and give it to his girl friend, Toodles. 5 chocolate for 3 years equal 15 chocolates because 3 times 5 is 15. After 3 years, Jerry decided to take the chocolate out of his jar and count them. There were exactly 39 chocolates.Now, Jerry is wondering how much chocolate Quacky and Nibbles gave him. So he decides to do some math.
This story is so cute! I love how Tom steals Jerry's chocolates and gives it to his girlfriend. I think the story was a little bit confusing, but that part will be covered well enough. This story fits well with your equation. I could understand it better with the expantations you put up before the 2nd post. Creative and great story.
I liked how you added the story step by step. Also I liked how you wrote the solving steps just in case someone is curious how to solve. Also, the story is very interesting and the story fits the equation very well. I don't see any major grammatical errors and good job!
I like the way how you organized your story. By doing so, you created a clear story that fits well into your equation. However, I did not understand why the “For three years, Jerry didn’t eat any of his precious chocolates and kept them in a cute little jar” will match the equation 3(2). Other than that, your story is very imaginative and well done.
Story for Equation #3
ReplyDelete3(2n)-15=39
▸Every Valentines, Jerry would get a certain amount of chocolates from his two friends, Quacky and Nibbles.
2n
▸For three years, Jerry didn’t eat any of his precious chocolates and kept them in a cute little jar.
3(2n)
▸But every Valentines day, Tom would steal 5 chocolates from Jerry and give it to his girl friend, Toodles. 5 chocolate for 3 years equal 15 chocolates because 3 times 5 is 15.
3(2n)-15
▸After 3 years, Jerry decided to take the chocolate out of his jar and count them. There were exactly 39 chocolates.
3(2n)-15=39
▸Now, Jerry is wondering how much chocolate Quacky and Nibbles gave him. So he decides to do some math.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Math Time = Solving Time
3(2n)-15=39
▸First, you have to 3 times 2n because in order of operations, Parenthesis comes first. (PEMDAS)
6n-15=39
▸Now, you have to make the variables become lonely because you are a nasty bully! (Just like Tom) So what do you do? You add 15 to -15. Oh, and what you do here, you do it to the other side too.
6n=54
▸Now, you have to divide! What is 54 dived by 6? Well, it is 9 because 6 times 9 is 54!
n=9
▸Ta-da! Now Jerry knows how much chocolates Quacky and Nibbles gave. Quacky and Nibbles gave 9, and 18 in total to Jerry.
(Story Only Ver.)
ReplyDeleteEvery Valentines day, Jerry would get a certain amount of chocolates from his two friends, Quacky and Nibbles. For three years, Jerry didn’t eat any of his precious chocolates and kept them in a cute little jar. But every Valentines day, Tom would steal 5 chocolates from Jerry and give it to his girl friend, Toodles. 5 chocolate for 3 years equal 15 chocolates because 3 times 5 is 15. After 3 years, Jerry decided to take the chocolate out of his jar and count them. There were exactly 39 chocolates.Now, Jerry is wondering how much chocolate Quacky and Nibbles gave him. So he decides to do some math.
This story is so cute! I love how Tom steals Jerry's chocolates and gives it to his girlfriend. I think the story was a little bit confusing, but that part will be covered well enough. This story fits well with your equation. I could understand it better with the expantations you put up before the 2nd post. Creative and great story.
DeleteI liked how you added the story step by step. Also I liked how you wrote the solving steps just in case someone is curious how to solve. Also, the story is very interesting and the story fits the equation very well. I don't see any major grammatical errors and good job!
ReplyDeleteI like the way how you organized your story. By doing so, you created a clear story that fits well into your equation. However, I did not understand why the “For three years, Jerry didn’t eat any of his precious chocolates and kept them in a cute little jar” will match the equation 3(2). Other than that, your story is very imaginative and well done.
ReplyDelete