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Additional Practice Answers ACTIVITY 1.1 1. Answers may vary. Sample answers: a. 3, 5, 7, 9 b. 4, 8, 12, 16 c. 8, 16, 24, 32 2. a. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 12 b. 1, 5, 25 11. Answers may vary. Sample answer: Two examples of composite numbers are 6 and 8. The factors of 6 are 1, 2, 3, and 6; the factors of 8 are 1, 2, 4, and 8. These numbers are composite because they have factors other than 1 and themselves. ACTIVITY 1.2 c. 1, 19 12. 12, 36, 42, 63, 90 d. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, 24 13. Answers may vary. Sample answer: Three three-digit numbers that are divisible by 9 are 153, 279, and 666. I chose these numbers because the sum of their digits is a number divisible by 9. 3. 6 is a factor of 36. This is true because 36 is 6 × 6. 4. Joanne’s claim is incorrect because numbers that are perfect squares have an odd number of factors. For example, 16 has five factors: 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16. (Accept any correct counterexample to Joanne’s claim, with or without the observation that the number happens to be a perfect square.) 5. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, 16, 24, 48 6. 2, 3, 5, 11, 13 7. 4, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15 © 2010 College Board. All rights reserved. UNIT 1 8. Answers may vary. Sample answer: You can determine if a number is prime or composite by listing the number’s factors. If the number has factors other than itself and 1, then it is composite. If the number’s only factors are 1 and itself, then the number is prime. 9. There is only one even prime number, 2. This is true because for every even number greater than 2, 2 is a factor of that number. 10. a. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 12, 18, 36; composite b. 1, 7, 11, 77; composite c. 1, 97; prime 14. The divisibility rules for 3 and 9 are similar in that they both are determined by finding the digit sum. They are different because to be divisible by 3 a number’s digit sum must be divisible by 3 and to be divisible by 9, a number’s digit sum must be divisible by 9. 15. 54, 126, 738 16. 1, 2, 7, 11, 14, 22, 77, 154 17. Answers may vary. Sample answer: 60, 120, 180 18. Answers may vary. Sample answer: 216 and 456 because their last two digits form a number that is divisible by 4. 19. Answers may vary. Sample answer: 230 and 740 because they both end in 0. 20. 24 and 72 ACTIVITY 1.3 21. 2 × 2 × 3 × 3, or 22 × 32 22. 26 23. 2 × 2 × 2 × 2 × 3 × 3, or 24 × 32 Level 1, Unit 1 • Number Concepts 1 Additional Practice Answers 24. 34; 9 is not a prime number 25. 3 × 7; 1 is not a prime number and is not included when writing a prime factorization. 26. 23 × 32 × 5 27. 2 × 32 × 73 28. 2 × 2 × 2 × 7 × 3 × 3 × 3 × 3 29. 32 × 5 30. 112 3 3 2 31. 27 matches 3 ; 8 matches 2 ; 25 matches 5 ; 32 matches 25; 49 matches 72. 32. 15: 1, 3, 5, 15 63: 1, 3, 7, 9, 21, 63 33. 12: 2 × 2 × 3 Common factor: 3 34. 16 3 9 4 64 32 2 8 18 64 35. Answers may vary. Sample answer: The methods all help you to find the factors that the numbers have in common and then you can find the greatest common factor. They are different in how they have you find the common factors. 36. Jake can give equal numbers of tiles of each color to each of four friends 37. 48 38. 720 2 42. Answers may vary. Sample answer: 10 and 20 have a greatest common factor of 10. 43. 12 boxes, each containing two oranges and three fruit snacks 45: 5 × 3 × 3 6 40. Robbie is not correct because 60 is not a factor of 12. It appears that Robbie found the LCM by mistake. 41. Linda is not correct because 12 is not a multiple of 60. It appears that Linda found the GCF by mistake. ACTIVITY 1.4 18 39. Answers may vary. Sample answer: In both methods you find the least common multiple of the numbers. In one method, you multiply (or use repeated addition) to get lists of multiples; in the other method, you divide the numbers into their prime factors and then multiply certain of those factors to find the LCM. SpringBoard® Mathematics with Meaning™ Level 1 44. 2 45. Answers may vary. Sample answer: 6 and 8. 46. 12 weeks from now 47. 50 48. Check students’ diagrams. GCF = 12 and LCM = 180 49. Answers may vary. Students should give their choice and show an example of finding the GCF using whichever method they chose. 50. 6 ACTIVITY 1.5 13 ; Sufia: ___ 8 21 ; Tera: ___ 51. Rod: ___ 25 25 25 1 ; ten 52. Four boxes should be shaded for __ 3 5 , and three boxes should be shaded for __ 6 1 . Ordered from boxes should be shaded for __ 4 5 1 , __ 1 , __ least to greatest: __ 4 3 6 © 2010 College Board. All rights reserved. UNIT 1 Additional Practice Answers 53. Answers may vary. Sample answers: 10 ___ 15 a. ___ 18 ; 27 6 ___ 9 b. ___ 14 ; 21 4 ___ 6 c. ___ 10 ; 15 5 54. __ 8 . Sample explanations may include finding common denominators and then comparing numerators, or cross multiplying. 63. 0 42 64. ___ 4 35 16 1 10 1 3 2 3 36 8 3 5 4 5 27 7___ 2 ___ 8 3 11 3 ft; 67 in.; 65 in.; 5__ 1 ft 65. 5__ 4 4 66. a. < 73 ___ b. < c. > 55. a. < b. < 67. 11 c. > 5 56. __ 7 5 __ 5 ___ 5 ___ 2 57. __ 3 __ 4 __ 11 13 6 __ 7 7 7 7 17 ___ 8 ___ 3 11 __ 58. ___ 20 10 15 5 3 and ___ 24 . Explanations may vary. Sample 59. __ 8 64 answer: These are equivalent because each can be converted to the other using the Property of One. © 2010 College Board. All rights reserved. 1 UNIT 1 9 ACTIVITY 1.6 2 60. a. 8__ 9 b. 6 1 c. 3__ 4 __ d. 3 2 3 17 ___ 61. a. 5 47 ___ b. 7 71 c. ___ 6 89 ___ d. 10 37 ___ 31 62. ___ 16 8 ACTIVITY 1.7 68. a. 0.125 b. 0.4 c. 2.61 d. 6.07 e. 0.12 2 69. a. ___ 25 17 b. 16___ 20 1 c. 99____ 100 3 d. __ 5 3 e. 312___ 50 70. 0.052 0.5 0.52 0.523 71. 3.2 2.32 2.3 72. 3.02 5 6 1.25 0 1 2 2 22 5 3 5 3 4 5 73. a. 8.8 3 4__ 8 1 5__ 4 b. 2.3 c. 6.7 Level 1, Unit 1 • Number Concepts 3 Additional Practice Answers UNIT 1 82. 74. a. 12.67 b. 24.68 -10 -8 -6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 8 10 c. 0.45 75. Answers may vary. Sample answer: I would 25 convert the decimal part (0.25) to ____ 100 1 . Then I would and then reduce that to __ 1 behind the 1 to4 form the mixed put the __ 4 number. 76. Answers may vary. Sample answer: I would 1 to 0.5 by dividing 1 by 2. I would convert __ 2 then put .5 behind the 3 to form the decimal. 3 7 4 8 77. 0 1 2 2 7 10 4 3 3 100 4 83. a. -9, -8, 0, 2 b. -7, -5, 1, 10 c. -10, -3, 2, 10 84. a. 5 b. 6 c. -24 85. a. -4 b. -8 c. -3 86. -7° 5 78. 1:41.11; 1:41.24; 1:41.73 87. 137 ft 88. -10 dollars ACTIVITY 1.8 79. a. 5 b. -40 c. 12 d. -4 a. a 10-foot drop in elevation b. a 35-dollar deposit c. your aunt gives you $20 d. the temperature is 8 degrees below zero 81. a. 45 b. 6 c. 18 d. 0 e. 8 4 SpringBoard® Mathematics with Meaning™ Level 1 © 2010 College Board. All rights reserved. 80. Answers may vary. Sample answers: