Skip to main content

Lunchtime!

This is a level 3 number activity from the Figure It Out theme series. A PDF of the student activity is included.

<img src="/images/decorative.jpg" alt="" />

Tags

  • AudienceKaiako
  • Learning AreaMathematics and Statistics
  • Resource LanguageEnglish
  • Resource typeActivity
  • SeriesFigure It Out

About this resource

Figure It Out is a series of 80 books published between 1999 and 2009 to support teaching and learning in New Zealand classrooms.

This resource provides the teachers’ notes and answers for one activity from the Figure It Out series. A printable PDF of the student activity can be downloaded from the materials that come with this resource.

Specific learning outcomes:

  • Use additive strategies to solve money problems.
  • Use multiplication to solve problems.
Reviews
0

Lunchtime!

Achievement objectives

NA3-1: Use a range of additive and simple multiplicative strategies with whole numbers, fractions, decimals, and percentages.

Required materials

  • Figure It Out, Level 2–3, Theme: Gala, "Lunchtime!", pages 12–13
  • a calculator

See Materials that come with this resource to download:

  • Lunchtime activity (.pdf)

Activity

 | 

Encourage the students to work out the problems mentally, using their own preferred and varied methods. Your main task will be to ensure that the students think carefully about the information given, understand what the problem is asking them to do, and look for the important information that will help them solve the problems.

Ask supplementary questions or give hints if the students are stuck. For example:

  • What is the question asking you to do?
  • How many hamburgers does he buy?
  • How much is that?
  • How did you work that out?
  • Can you add them all together?

A few students may need to model the situations with toy money, and others may like to keep some brief records on scratch paper or in a calculator memory. You might also suggest that some organised listing could help keep track of their progress:

 

Customer has

Orders paid for

Do they have enough money?

Question 1

$20

2 burgers @ $2.50= $5.00

2 fritters @ $2.00 = $4.00

2 curries @ $3.00 = $6.00

Yes

Question 2
 

For question 3b, the students could use a table to find all the possible ways they could pay for a $6 lunch, using notes and/or gold coins:

$5

$2

$1

I

 

I

 

III

 

 

II

II

 

I

IIII

 

 

IIIIII

Ask the students to explain how they worked out the answers, especially combining small amounts of money. You could follow up the set task by asking the students to write and share their own lunchtime problems with the class.

The students will need to understand profit and how to calculate it to answer question 5. You could work through a simple problem with the students before they begin the question. For example,

  • Mr. Larson sells 50 sausages at $1 each. He has bought the sausages for 25 cents each. How much profit did he make?

1.

a. Yes

b. The total is $15, which is less than $20.

2.

a. $13

b. Yes

3.

a. Answers will vary, but here is an example of four different lunches that cost $6:

3 sausages $3
1 curry $3

2 sausages $2
2 fritters $4

1 sausage $1
1 fritter $2
1 curry $3

2 hamburgers $5
1 sausage $1

b.

  • $5 and $1
  • $2 and $2 and $2
  • $2 and $2 and $1 and $1
  • $2 and $1 and $1 and $1 and $1
  • $1 and $1 and $1 and $1 and $1 and $1

4.

4 drinks. He has spent $16 ($3.50 + $2 + $7.50 + $3), so he has $4 left for drinks.

5.

a. $135

b. $90

The quality of the images on this page may vary depending on the device you are using.