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We had a large number of solutions sent in and most of them were correct.
Baston, Midgley, Longcroft and Montgomerie Schools sent in many solutions. Here are some explanations that showed some good thinking.
The Maths Challenge Club from St Aidan's Primary sent in the following:
Isobel used a trial and error method:
200 \times 1.5 = 300 no- too small
300 \times 1.5 = 450 no- too big
250 \times 1.5 = 375 yes!
So the first jump was 250cm
She used a trial and error method for the second question too:
10+10+10= 30 no- too small
20+20+20=60 no- too small
30+30+30=90 no, still too small
40+40+40=120 yes!
So the first jump was 40+40=80cm
Jamila got the same answer, but used a different method:
3.75 \div 2 = 1.875
1.875 \div 3 = 0.625
1.875 + 0.625 = 2.500 or 2.5m
(a\div2) + (a\div6)
She used the same method for the second question:
(a\div3) \times 2 where a=120cm = 80cm
Holly and Chris from Myland School in England sent in this thorough explanation;
We worked out that Ben's first jump was 250cm and Mia's first jump was 80cm. We used division, multiplication, and addition to solve the problem.
First we halved the last jump number. Mia's last jump was 120cm, half of that is 60cm. We halved the number then added on the half. That would mean that Mia's last jump was 90cm, which wasn't right.
We used a trial and improvement method. We chose round even numbers because it was much easier to find half. If the last jump worked out as 75cm less than what we needed then we added 75cm to the first jump number and tried again. Example - If the 1st jump was 200cm the last jump would be 300cm so we tried - If the 1st jump 275cm then the last jump would be 412.5cm That didn't work but it did get us closer to the answer. As 275cm was too high, we tried 260cm, then 250cm.
We tried our own standing long jumps. Our best scores were:
Holly 110cm Jordan 143cm
If we improved our scores by half again that would be:
Holly 165cm Jordan 214.5cm
If we improved our scores by a quarter again that would be:
Holly 137.5cm Jordan 178.75cm
We folded the tape measure to help us work out a half and a quarter of different lengths.
Finally, Daniel from King's School New Zealand said:
Ben's last jump was 3.75 metres long.
3.75 = f + \frac{f}{2}
f = Ben's 1st jump
You need to find the value of f.
So 3.75 \div 3 = 1.25
1.5f \div 3 = \frac{f}{2}
\frac{f}{2} \times 2 = f
1.25 \times 2 = 2.5
f = 2.5
Ben's first jump was 2.5 metres
Mia's last jump was 1.20 metres high.
1.20 = f + \frac{f}{2}
f = Mia's first jump
You need to find the value of f.
So 1.20 \div 3 = 0.40
\frac{1.5f}{3} = \frac{f}{2}
\frac{f}{2} \times 2 = f
0.40 \times 2 = 0.80
f = 0.80
Mia's first jump was 0.80 metres high.
Well done all of you, and thanks for those contributions sent in.
Skippy and Anna are locked in a room in a large castle. The key to that room, and all the other rooms, is a number. The numbers are locked away in a problem. Can you help them to get out?