Tuesday, February 4, 2014

18: Breaking twenty-five

In this "Tiny Math Games" post by Dan Meyer, there's an idea from [Malcolm Swan]
Pick a number. Say 25. Now break it up into as many pieces as you want. 10, 10, and 5, maybe. Or 2 and 23. Twenty-five ones would work. Now multiply all those pieces together.


What's the biggest product you can make?

What's your strategy?

Will it always work?

Does it work for fractions?

Is there another set of numbers you could use that isn't explicitly against the stated rules?

2 comments:

  1. Is there another set of numbers you could use that isn't explicitly against the stated rules?

    The kid that tries this out with negative numbers is going to be pretty pleased with the result.

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  2. Nice question! I had been thinking about this exact question the other day and I wrote up a general solution :)

    http://themathbehindthemagic.wordpress.com/2014/02/09/additive-number-game/

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