AMC 8 · 2024 · #12

Easy mode Grade 2
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Problem

Imagine Rohan has 4 fish tanks lined up in a row. Altogether, they hold 90 guppies.

Tank 1 has some guppies. Tank 2 has 1 more guppy than Tank 1. Tank 3 has 2 more guppies than Tank 2. Tank 4 has 3 more guppies than Tank 3.

How many guppies are in Tank 4?

Pick an answer.

(A)
20
(B)
21
(C)
23
(D)
24
(E)
26
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Toolkit + CCSS Solution

Understand

Restated: Rohan has 4 fish tanks holding 90 guppies in total. Each tank has a few more guppies than the one before: tank 2 has 1 more than tank 1, tank 3 has 2 more than tank 2, and tank 4 has 3 more than tank 3. We need the number of guppies in tank 4.

Givens: Total guppies across all 4 tanks: 90; Tank 2 has 1 more guppy than tank 1; Tank 3 has 2 more guppies than tank 2; Tank 4 has 3 more guppies than tank 3; Answer choices: (A) 20, (B) 21, (C) 23, (D) 24, (E) 26

Unknowns: The number of guppies in tank 4

Understand

Restated: Rohan has 4 fish tanks holding 90 guppies in total. Each tank has a few more guppies than the one before: tank 2 has 1 more than tank 1, tank 3 has 2 more than tank 2, and tank 4 has 3 more than tank 3. We need the number of guppies in tank 4.

Givens: Total guppies across all 4 tanks: 90; Tank 2 has 1 more guppy than tank 1; Tank 3 has 2 more guppies than tank 2; Tank 4 has 3 more guppies than tank 3; Answer choices: (A) 20, (B) 21, (C) 23, (D) 24, (E) 26

Plan

Primary tool: #6 Guess and Check

Secondary: #3 Eliminate Possibilities, #1 Draw a Diagram

This is a multiple-choice problem and the unknown is exactly the number we are asked for (guppies in tank 4). Each answer choice fully determines all four tanks by walking backwards (tank 3 = tank 4 - 3, tank 2 = tank 3 - 2, tank 1 = tank 2 - 1). We can test a single choice, add the four numbers, and see if it equals 90 — Tool #6. Combined with Tool #3 we can eliminate any choice whose total is not 90, and Tool #1 (a quick row of 4 boxes) keeps the four tanks straight.

Execute — Answer: E

#1 Draw a Diagram K.OA.A.1 Step 1
  • Draw four boxes in a row labeled Tank 1, Tank 2, Tank 3, Tank 4.
  • Mark the gaps between the boxes with +1, +2, +3 to record how much bigger each next tank is.
  • This picture makes it obvious that once we know any one tank, we know all four.
$$\boxed{T_1}\ \xrightarrow{+1}\ \boxed{T_2}\ \xrightarrow{+2}\ \boxed{T_3}\ \xrightarrow{+3}\ \boxed{T_4}$$

💡 Even kindergarten kids can draw boxes and use arrows to show 'a little more' between them.

#6 Guess and Check 2.NBT.B.5 Step 2
  • Guess the largest answer choice first: try (E) Tank 4 = 26.
  • Walk backwards through the picture: Tank 3 = 26 - 3 = 23, Tank 2 = 23 - 2 = 21, Tank 1 = 21 - 1 = 20.
  • All four counts are whole numbers, which is a good sign.
$$T_4=26,\ T_3=23,\ T_2=21,\ T_1=20$$

💡 Subtracting small numbers like 3, 2, and 1 from two-digit numbers is Grade 2 fluent subtraction.

#6 Guess and Check 2.NBT.B.6 Step 3
  • Add the four tank counts and check whether they total 90.
  • Group friendly pairs: $20+21=41$ and $23+26=49$, then $41+49=90$.
  • The total matches, so the guess works.
$$20+21+23+26 = 41+49 = 90\ \checkmark$$

💡 Adding up to four two-digit numbers using mental grouping is exactly the Grade 2 standard.

#3 Eliminate Possibilities 1.NBT.B.3 Step 4
  • Since choice (E) already satisfies the total of 90 and the four-tank rule, every other choice must fail (the four tank counts are forced once Tank 4 is fixed, so only one choice can give the right total).
  • For example, choice (A) 20 would give tanks 20, 17, 15, 14 with sum 66 — too small.
  • So we can eliminate the others and confirm (E).
$$\text{Choice (E)}\colon 20+21+23+26=90\ \Rightarrow\ \textbf{(E)}$$

💡 Comparing the sum to 90 to decide 'yes' or 'no' is the Grade 1 idea of comparing two-digit numbers.

[1] #1 K.OA.A.1 Draw four boxes in a row labeled Tank 1, Tank 2, Tank 3, Tank 4. Mark the gaps b
[2] #6 2.NBT.B.5 Guess the largest answer choice first: try (E) Tank 4 = 26. Walk backwards throu
[3] #6 2.NBT.B.6 Add the four tank counts and check whether they total 90. Group friendly pairs:
[4] #3 1.NBT.B.3 Since choice (E) already satisfies the total of 90 and the four-tank rule, every

Review

Reasonableness: Check the magnitude: if all four tanks held the same amount, each would hold $90 \div 4 = 22.5$. Tank 4 should be a bit bigger than 22.5 because it has the most extras (+1+2+3 over Tank 1). Our answer 26 is just a few above 22.5 — that fits perfectly. The four numbers (20, 21, 23, 26) are all positive whole numbers and add to 90, matching every condition in the problem.

Alternative: An alternative is Tool #13 (Convert to Algebra): let $x$ be Tank 1, then Tank 2 $= x+1$, Tank 3 $= x+3$, Tank 4 $= x+6$. The sum gives $4x+10=90$, so $x=20$ and Tank 4 $= 26$. Same answer, but Guess-and-Check is faster for an elementary student and avoids any algebra setup.

CCSS standards used (min grade 2)

  • K.OA.A.1 Represent addition and subtraction with objects, fingers, or drawings (Drawing the four tanks as boxes with +1, +2, +3 arrows between them to model the relationships.)
  • 1.NBT.B.3 Compare two two-digit numbers using symbols (Comparing the sum of the guessed counts to 90 to decide whether the guess is correct.)
  • 2.NBT.B.5 Fluently add and subtract within 100 (Walking backwards from Tank 4 to Tank 1 by subtracting 3, 2, and 1 from two-digit numbers.)
  • 2.NBT.B.6 Add up to four two-digit numbers using strategies (Adding the four tank counts 20 + 21 + 23 + 26 to check the total equals 90.)

⭐ This AMC 8 problem only needs Grade 2 two-digit adding and subtracting you already know!

⭐ This AMC 8 problem only needs Grade 2 two-digit adding and subtracting you already know!