Estimation is - Dalton State College
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Transcript Estimation is - Dalton State College
Estimation Strategies
Education's purpose is to replace
an empty mind with an open one.
Malcolm Forbes
Estimation
Estimation is being able to quickly and easily get
a number that is close enough to the exact
answer of a mathematical problem to be useful.
Usually it involves some simplified mental
calculation.
Every time you use a calculator, for example, it
would be useful to know whether the answer it
gives is sensible.
This requires making an estimate.
Sometimes a problem does not need an exact
answer because the problem itself is not exact.
Estimation
Estimation is:
using some computation
using easy mental strategies
using number sense
using a variety of strategies
getting close to the exact
answer
Estimation is not:
just a guess
doing hand calculations
using a calculator
exact
Estimation
Students need to know in which situations it is
appropriate to use estimation. These situations
basically fall into three categories:
There is no need to have an exact answer. An estimate
is good enough
"Do I have enough money?"
There is not enough information to get an exact answer
"About how many times will my heart beat in an
hour?"
To check if the answer from a calculation is reasonable
When Should You Estimate?
Decide if the situation needs an estimate or an
exact number. Explain your answer.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
A headline noting the number of people living in China.
The amount of money a baby sitter charges per hour.
The width of a window screen.
The distance from Earth to the moon.
The hours at soccer practice in one month.
The number of tickets to sell for a play.
Rounding Estimate
•
This is the most familiar form of estimation and
is a way of changing the problem to one that is
easier to work with mentally.
•
•
Good estimators follow their mental computation with
and adjustment to compensate for the rounding.
To round a number simply means to substitute a
“nice” number that is close so that some
computation can be done more easily.
Rounding Estimate
Rounding estimate – choose the digit place
that you will round to, round to that digit
place and then add.
$ 135.95
15.90
+ 24.90
$ 175.75
$ 140
20
+ 20
$ 180
Front-End Estimate
•
This strategy focuses on the leading or leftmost
digits in numbers, ignoring the rest.
•
After an estimate is made on the basis of only
these front-end digits, an adjustment can be
made by noticing how much has been ignored.
Front End Estimate
Front-end estimate – add up the front-end
digits, then round the remaining digits and
add together. This tends to be the more
accurate of estimation.
2.71
1.73
+ 1.10
5.54
2.71
.70
1.73
.70
+ 1.10
+ .10
4
1.50
4 + 1.50 = 5.50
Cluster Estimate
Cluster estimate – Used when several
numbers are all close to the same value.
$ 15.35
16.05
+ 14.90
$ 46.30
$ 15 x 3 = $45
Practice
Using the three methods, estimate the total
cost of the following items:
$4.39, $3.75, $4.96, and $2.40
Which method did you find the simplest?
Which method came the closest to the true
cost?
Why do you think this was the closest?
Practice
Kim ran 2.76 miles on Monday, 2.34 miles on
Tuesday, and 1.97 miles on Wednesday. Use
frontend estimation to estimate the total distance
Kim ran.
7.1 miles
Rico’s dog has a litter of four puppies. The puppies
weigh 2.33 lb, 2.70 lb, 2.27 lb, and 2.64 lb. Use
clustering to estimate the total weight of the
puppies.
9.9 lb
Practice
You have $11.50 to buy two presents. You find one
item that costs $7.43. Another item costs $4.41.
What estimation strategy will help you decide
whether you have enough money to buy both?
Explain.
You used a calculator to find 383.8 – 21.9. Your
estimate was 360, but your display reads 164.8. How
could you have gotten 164.8 on your calculator?
Practice
Use the rounding method to solve the following:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
386 + 512
334 + 488 + 574
1,530 – 1,122
41,506 – 28,566
1,788 + 2,308 + 4,952
4.2 + 7.75
17.08 – 15.32
Practice
Now use the front-end method:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
386 + 512
334 + 488 + 574
1,530 – 1,122
41,506 – 28,566
1,788 + 2,308 + 4,952
4.2 + 7.75
17.08 – 15.32
Which method
brought you
closer to the
actual answer?
Reasonableness
Explain whether the following are reasonable:
Fisherman Frank’s fish weighed 2.2 pounds per foot.
The scales showed a weight of 7.3 pounds. Frank
claims his fish was 14.6 feet long. True?
Trixie the trampolinist bounces at a rate of 2
bounces every 6 seconds. At this rate, how long will
it take her to bounce 3600 times? Trixie says 20
minutes. Accurate?
Pole-vaulter Paula leaps 2.1 times as far as her little
sister Polly. Polly’s highest leap is 5.8 feet. Paula
claims her highest is 28 feet. Can this be?
Estimating Products & Quotients
Use mental math to estimate products &
quotients.
Multiply:
7.65 × 3.2
Round
8 × 3
Estimate
= 24
Estimating Products & Quotients
When dividing, use compatible numbers to
estimate quotients.
Compatible numbers are numbers that are easy
to divide mentally.
Round the divisor first, then round the dividend
to a compatible number.
Divide:
Round the divisor
Round the dividend
to a multiple of 2
38.9 ÷ 1.79
38.9 ÷ 2
40 ÷ 2
= 20
Estimate
Estimate the following by rounding:
3.9 × 4.67
4 × 8.512
3.25 × 14.7
460 ÷ 92
31,776 ÷ 39
40,995 ÷ 62
20
36
45
5
800
700
Practice
Arlene bought 6 yards of fabric to make a
quilt. The fabric cost $6.75/yard. The sales
clerk charged Arlene $45.90 before tax. Did
the clerk make a mistake? Explain.
Shari is planning a 450 mile car trip. Her car
can travel about 39 miles on a gallon of
gasoline. Gasoline cost $1.89/gallon. About
how much will the gas cost for her trip?