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Uh oh! Van Gogh!

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Uh oh! Van Gogh! By: Caitlin Malone – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Uh oh! Van Gogh!


1
Uh oh! Van Gogh!
  • By Caitlin Malone

2
  • Whats up? My name is Maria. I am in Mr. Wells
    fourth grade class, where we run the school café.
    I just so happen to be the cafés manager!

3
  • The other day, Mr. Wells introduced a new
    student to the class. His name was Vincent, but
    he wanted us to call him by his last nameVan
    Gogh.

4
  • Van Gogh was kinda weird. He loved art class

5
  • but he hated math!

6
  • Mr. Wells noticed that Van Gogh was having
    trouble
  • so he came to me with an idea!

7
  • Why doesnt Van Gogh help out with the school
    café? he asked. Then he could learn all about
    math!

8
  • I was about to say that might not be the best
    idea when Mr. Wells added
  • After all, youre such a great manager!
  • How could I say no?

9
  • I decided this was too big of a job to do on my
    own, so I asked Joe, Shae, and Nikki to help.

10
  • Joe suggested that we put him in charge of the
    register. So, Van Gogh became our new cashier!

11
  • The next day, Van Gogh sold three bags of chips
    to Ms. Honeycutt. The chips cost
  • 2.45

12
  • So, Van Gogh did the problem like this
  • 1 1 1
  • 2.45
  • x 3
  • 73.5

13
Uh Oh! Van Gogh!
14
  • Do you see your mistake? asked Joe.
  • 2.45
  • x 3
  • 73.5
  • You counted over your decimal place from the
    left, not the right.

15
  • Remember that the decimal point helps to hold
    the place value. Next time, try estimating before
    you perform the problem.
  • If you know that 2 x 3 6, then your answer
    to the problem should be close to that.

16
  • Van Gogh tried the problem again, this time
    recognizing that the decimal point helps
    determine the value of the number
  • 2.45
  • x 3
  • 7.35

17
Way to go! Van Gogh!
18
  • The following day, a student came up to Van Gogh
    asking for a refund. She had just bought three
    ice cream cones, but realized one friend was
    absent today so she only needed two. She had
    already paid and asked Van Gogh for the amount of
    one cone. The total amount she paid for three
    cones was
  • 6.75

19
  • Van Gogh could not find the price of one cone,
    but he did know that if he divided the total
    amount by three (how many cones she bought) then
    he would know how much to give back
  • 125
  • 3 6.75

20
Uh Oh! Van Gogh!
21
  • Shae stopped Van Gogh before it was too late.
    You have to remember the decimal point! she
    exclaimed.
  • 125
  • 3 6.75
  • Remember that the decimal point tells us the
    difference between dollars and cents. By
    inserting the decimal point, you are telling the
    customer how many dollars and how many cents
    something is.

22
  • Van go tried the problem again, this time
    remembering that the decimal point shows the
    difference between whole numbers and parts of the
    whole
  • 1.25
  • 3 6.75

23
Way to go! Van Gogh!
24
  • Van Gogh was really starting to get it! Then at
    the end of the week, we had a sale at the café,
    making everything
  • 20
  • Of the original price!!!

25
  • Mr. Lowery came in after P.E. class very
    thirsty! He asked Van Gogh for a can of soda,
    which was one dollar. Van Gogh knew that twenty
    percent could be written as a decimal, and so he
    did the problem like this
  • 1.00
  • x .02
  • .0200

26
Uh Oh! Van Gogh!
27
  • Nikki came to the rescue! Your decimal point is
    not in the right place to equal twenty percent!
    she pointed out.
  • Twenty percent of one-hundred percent is the
    same as the fraction
  • _20_
  • 100
  • And that fraction means twenty hundredths. What
    does twenty hundredths look like as a decimal?

28
  • Van Gogh remembered that the number value right
    after the decimal point was tenths, so the number
    value after that was hundredths! He thought about
    it and wrote the number like this
  • .20
  • but that looked like two tenths to Van Gogh. He
    wondered, Does two tenths equal twenty
    one-hundredths?

29
  • Nikki suggested he look at them both as
    fractions and compare
  • _20_ _2_
  • 100 10
  • Van Gogh remembered that he could cancel out a
    zero from the numerator and denominator because
    they made a fraction equal to one. So, that means
    that they are the same!

30
  • _20_ _2_ x _10_ _2_ x _1_
  • 100 10 10 10 1
  • _20_ .20
  • 100 222

31
  • Van Gogh decided to try the problem again
  • 1.00
  • x .20
  • 0.20

32
Way to go! Van Gogh!
33
  • Van Gogh soon became one of the best math
    students in our class! He often did problems on
    the chalkboard to show us how to solve the
    problem.

34
  • Also, he found other ways to help make our café
    better
  • with his art!

35
The End
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