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What do you think of this Singapore math problem?
Students from Singapore get the highest scores in international math tests. The claim is that this is largely due to a technique that they use before teaching algebra known as block modeling. I have been looking at several examples online. The problems are easy to solve algebraically, but I am having a hard time using block modeling.
Here is an example of a 7th grade math problem. 3/5 of the men at a conference are from Georgia and ⅓ of the women are from Georgia. The number of men from Georgia is the same as the number of women from Georgia and there are 8 more women than men. How many people are from Georgia?
You might want to pause for a moment and work this out on your own. Algebraically, I let x = number of men. Then we get:
3/5 x = ⅓(x+8).
x works out to be 10. There are 3/5x=6 men from Georgia and an equal number of women for a total of 12.
Here is the diagram used for the Singapore approach. The top row shows 3 of the 5 men boxes representing the 3/5 of the men from Georgia. Since the number of women from Georgia is the same as the number of men from there, 3 boxes also represent the number of women from Georgia.
Because ⅓ of the women are from Georgia, we use 9 boxes to represent the total number of women. The women have 4 more boxes than the men and since there are 8 more women than men, each of those boxes must stand for 2 people. There are 6 boxes representing people from Georgia, so there must be a total of 6×2=12 people from there.
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