AMC 8 · 2015 · #3

Easy mode Grade 6
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Problem

Jack and Jill are heading to a pool that is 11 mile from their house. They leave home at the same moment.

Jill rides her bike the whole way at 1010 miles per hour. Jack walks the whole way at 44 miles per hour.

How many minutes before Jack does Jill arrive at the pool?

(A) 5(B) 6(C) 8(D) 9(E) 10\textbf{(A) }5\qquad\textbf{(B) }6\qquad\textbf{(C) }8\qquad\textbf{(D) }9\qquad \textbf{(E) }10

Pick an answer.

(A)
5
(B)
6
(C)
8
(D)
9
(E)
10
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Toolkit + CCSS Solution

Understand

Restated: Jack and Jill both leave home at the same instant for a pool that is $1$ mile away. Jill bikes at a constant $10$ mph; Jack walks at a constant $4$ mph. How many minutes earlier does Jill arrive?

Givens: Distance to the pool $= 1$ mile (same for both); Jill's speed $= 10$ mph (constant); Jack's speed $= 4$ mph (constant); Both leave at the same moment; Answer choices: (A) $5$, (B) $6$, (C) $8$, (D) $9$, (E) $10$ (minutes)

Unknowns: The number of minutes between Jill's arrival and Jack's arrival

Understand

Restated: Jack and Jill both leave home at the same instant for a pool that is $1$ mile away. Jill bikes at a constant $10$ mph; Jack walks at a constant $4$ mph. How many minutes earlier does Jill arrive?

Givens: Distance to the pool $= 1$ mile (same for both); Jill's speed $= 10$ mph (constant); Jack's speed $= 4$ mph (constant); Both leave at the same moment; Answer choices: (A) $5$, (B) $6$, (C) $8$, (D) $9$, (E) $10$ (minutes)

Plan

Primary tool: #8 Analyze the Units

Secondary: #7 Identify Subproblems

This is a rate problem with $\text{time} = \text{distance} / \text{speed}$. The catch is that distance is in miles and speed is in mph, so dividing gives hours — but the answer must be in minutes. Tool #8 (Analyze the Units) keeps the conversion honest: $\tfrac{\text{mile}}{\text{mile/hour}} = \text{hour}$, then $\text{hour} \times 60 = \text{minutes}$. Tool #7 (Identify Subproblems) splits the work into three clean pieces — Jill's time, Jack's time, and the difference — so each piece is a single short calculation.

Execute — Answer: D

#8 Analyze the Units 6.RP.A.3 Step 1
  • Compute Jill's travel time.
  • She covers $1$ mile at $10$ mph, so the time in hours is $1 / 10$.
  • Convert to minutes by multiplying by $60$.
$$t_{\text{Jill}} = \dfrac{1 \text{ mi}}{10 \text{ mph}} = \tfrac{1}{10} \text{ hr} = \tfrac{1}{10} \times 60 = 6 \text{ min}$$

💡 Dividing miles by miles-per-hour cancels "miles" and leaves "hours" — Grade 6 unit-rate reasoning.

#8 Analyze the Units 6.RP.A.3 Step 2
  • Compute Jack's travel time the same way.
  • He covers $1$ mile at $4$ mph, so the time in hours is $1 / 4$.
  • Convert to minutes by multiplying by $60$.
$$t_{\text{Jack}} = \dfrac{1 \text{ mi}}{4 \text{ mph}} = \tfrac{1}{4} \text{ hr} = \tfrac{1}{4} \times 60 = 15 \text{ min}$$

💡 Same unit-rate move as Jill's step — once the method works for one rider, it works for both.

#7 Identify Subproblems 4.MD.A.2 Step 3
  • Subtract to find how many minutes earlier Jill arrives.
  • Since both leave at the same instant, the gap between their arrivals equals the gap between their travel times.
$$t_{\text{Jack}} - t_{\text{Jill}} = 15 - 6 = 9 \text{ min} \;\Rightarrow\; \textbf{(D)}$$

💡 "Difference of two times" is the Grade 4 distance/time word-problem move — solving the third subproblem to finish the job.

[1] #8 6.RP.A.3 Compute Jill's travel time. She covers $1$ mile at $10$ mph, so the time in hour
[2] #8 6.RP.A.3 Compute Jack's travel time the same way. He covers $1$ mile at $4$ mph, so the t
[3] #7 4.MD.A.2 Subtract to find how many minutes earlier Jill arrives. Since both leave at the

Review

Reasonableness: Jill is $10 / 4 = 2.5$ times faster than Jack, so her travel time should be $2.5$ times shorter: $15 / 2.5 = 6$ min, matching the calculation. The gap of $9$ minutes is sensible for a $1$-mile trip at very different speeds — Jill finishes in $6$ min while Jack still has more than half the mile to go.

Alternative: Tool #3 (Eliminate Possibilities) on the choices: the gap must equal $t_{\text{Jack}} - t_{\text{Jill}}$. From $t_{\text{Jill}} = 6$ and $t_{\text{Jack}} = 15$, the difference is $9$, so only (D) survives. The choices $5, 6, 8, 10$ would correspond to wrong arithmetic — e.g. $10$ is $t_{\text{Jack}} - 5$ (forgetting to compute Jill's time), $6$ is just Jill's own time.

CCSS standards used (min grade 6)

  • 6.RP.A.3 Use ratio and rate reasoning to solve real-world and mathematical problems (Computing each rider's travel time as $\text{distance} / \text{speed}$ — a unit-rate calculation — for both Jill ($1/10$ hr) and Jack ($1/4$ hr).)
  • 5.MD.A.1 Convert among different-sized standard measurement units within a given system (Converting each rider's time from hours to minutes by multiplying by $60$ ($1/10 \times 60 = 6$ and $1/4 \times 60 = 15$).)
  • 4.MD.A.2 Solve word problems involving distances, time, liquid volumes, and money (Subtracting the two arrival times ($15 - 6 = 9$) to answer the question "how many minutes before Jack does Jill arrive?")

⭐ This AMC 8 problem only needs the Grade 6 rate rule "time = distance $\div$ speed" plus a minute-to-hour conversion you learned in Grade 5.

⭐ This AMC 8 problem only needs the Grade 6 rate rule "time = distance $\div$ speed" plus a minute-to-hour conversion you learned in Grade 5.