ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Algebraic Proof Videos 8 videos
Mathematical Reasoning Drill 6, Problem 4. Which of the following would be the new expression that gives the number of pizza slices available to ea...
Mathematical Reasoning Drill 5, Problem 1. Which of the following could be the number of pieces the lasagna was cut into?
Mathematical Reasoning Drill 5 Problem 3. Which of the following could be the integer mentioned?
CAHSEE Math 6.4 Mathematical Reasoning 208 Views
Share It!
Description:
Mathematical Reasoning Drill 6, Problem 4. Which of the following would be the new expression that gives the number of pizza slices available to each person?
Transcript
- 00:03
Shmoopy question coming your way in three… two… one…
- 00:08
Papa John is hosting Thanksgiving dinner. Unfortunately, his family always pressures
- 00:12
him into serving pizza, so the turkey has ended up in the garbage. Again.
- 00:17
Papa John expects to have x number of guests,
- 00:19
y number of pizzas will be ordered, each with 8 slices.
Full Transcript
- 00:23
The number of pizza slices for every person would be 8y over x.
- 00:29
If it turns out later that two more guests come by for dinner,
- 00:32
but the number of pizzas remains the same…
- 00:34
…which of the following would be the new expression that gives the number of pizza
- 00:38
slices available to each person?
- 00:40
And here are the potential answers...
- 00:46
So… what is this question asking?
- 00:48
Well, it’s just about the carbs, really.
- 00:50
We’re getting less pizza when these interlopers – uninvited Turkey-day crashers – show up.
- 00:57
The ratio is just pizzas to people and we’ve added 2 people…
- 01:01
…so we can add a 2 to the x part below and get the right equation – answer is C.
- 01:06
As in… “Carbo-loading.”
Related Videos
CAHSEE Math: Algebra and Functions Drill 5, Problem 3. Solve the equation.
If you already know what a conditional statement is, then you're smarter than you look. And boy do you look smart.
Indirect proofs (or proofs by contradiction) prove their conclusion by showing that the opposite cannot be true. You can use this in math and in ar...
Formal proofs present the oh-so-mathematical evidence in two columns: one for the statement they are claiming is true, and the other for the reason...