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Money

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visibility 29update 6 days agobookmarkshare

In this topic you will

  • Recognise and use local currency.
  • Recognise and use US dollars and cents.
  • Use banknotes and coins to make an amount.
 

Key Words

  • currency
  • dollar, cents
  • euro, euro cents
  • pound sterling, pence
  • price
  • unit of money
  • value
  • worth
  • yen
Show Definitions
  • currency: The type of money used in a country, made up of coins and banknotes.
  • dollar, cents: A dollar is a unit of money, and a cent is a smaller part of a dollar, where $100$ cents make $1$ dollar.
  • euro, euro cents: The euro is a unit of money used in many European countries, and $100$ euro cents make $1$ euro.
  • pound sterling, pence: The pound sterling is the money used in the UK, and a penny (pence) is a smaller part of a pound, where $100$ pence make $1$ pound.
  • price: The amount of money needed to buy something.
  • unit of money: The main named amount used to measure money in a currency, such as a dollar, euro, pound, or yen.
  • value: How much something is worth in money.
  • worth: Another way to say value, meaning the amount of money something equals or costs.
  • yen: The unit of money used in Japan.
 
Coins and Banknotes

Coins and banknotes have their value written on them. Different values can be used together to buy things.

 

EXERCISES

Exercise $1.8$

$1$.How many cents is each of these coins worth?

table of coins (Penny, Nickel, Dime, Quarter dollar, Half dollar) and their value in cents

👀 Show answer

Penny: $1$

Nickel: $5$

Dime: $10$

Quarter dollar: $25$

Half dollar: $50$

$2$.Erin used a Carroll diagram to sort US$ banknotes and coins.

Which coins or banknotes are missing from each section?

Draw them in the correct places on the Carroll diagram.

Carroll diagram sorting US$ coins and banknotes into Odd value and Not odd value

👀 Show answer

Missing items are:

• Quarter coin: $25$ c (odd value)

$5$-dollar banknote (odd value)

$20$-dollar banknote (not odd value)

$3$.Marcus spent $50$c on some candy.

He did not have a half dollar coin.

Which other coins could he pay with?

👀 Show answer

Examples of ways to make $50$c without a half dollar coin:

$2$ quarters ($2 \times 25 = 50$)

$5$ dimes ($5 \times 10 = 50$)

$10$ nickels ($10 \times 5 = 50$)

$50$ pennies ($50 \times 1 = 50$)

$1$ quarter + $2$ dimes + $1$ nickel ($25 + 20 + 5 = 50$)

$1$ quarter + $1$ dime + $3$ nickels ($25 + 10 + 15 = 50$)

 

Think like a Mathematician

Task: Zara says there must be at least $10$ different ways to make $20$c. Do you agree? How many different ways can you find?

Check each way you find by adding the coin values carefully.

Method:

  1. List the coin values you can use (for example: $1$c, $5$c, $10$c, $20$c).
  2. Start with the largest coin and work down, writing combinations that total $20$c.
  3. Record each combination in a neat way (for example: $10+5+5$ or $5+5+5+5$).
  4. Make sure you do not count the same combination twice in a different order.

Follow-up Questions:

$1$. Do you agree with Zara’s claim of “at least $10$ ways”? Explain briefly.
$2$. Write down $10$ different combinations that make $20$c.
$3$. What strategy helps you avoid counting the same combination more than once?
👀 show answer
  • $1$: Yes. There are more than $10$ different ways to make $20$c using common coin values (like $1$c, $5$c, $10$c, $20$c), so “at least $10$” is true.
  • $2$: Here are $10$ different combinations (order does not matter):
    $20$
    $10+10$
    $10+5+5$
    $10+5+1+1+1+1+1$
    $10+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1$
    $5+5+5+5$
    $5+5+5+1+1+1+1+1$
    $5+5+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1$
    $5+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1$
    $1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1$
  • $3$: Use a fixed order (largest coin to smallest) and only add equal-or-smaller coins as you continue. This way, $10+5+5$ is counted once, and you do not also count $5+10+5$ as a “new” way.
 

EXERCISES

$4$.Zara spent US$25$ on a T-shirt.

Which banknotes could she pay with?

👀 Show answer

Examples of ways to pay US$25$ using banknotes:

• US$20$ + US$5$

• US$10$ + US$10$ + US$5$

• US$5$ + US$5$ + US$5$ + US$5$ + US$5$

(Any combination of available banknotes that adds to US$25$ is correct.)

 

Think like a Mathematician

Task: You have $2$ different banknotes. Each banknote is less than US$100$. How much could you have?

Have you found all the possible answers?

Share your ways to pay US$100$ by checking your solutions carefully.

Method:

  1. List the banknote values you are allowed to use (for example: US$1$, US$5$, US$10$, US$20$, US$50$).
  2. Choose $2$ different banknotes (for example, US$20$ and US$50$).
  3. Add their values to find the total amount of money you could have.
  4. Systematically try all different pairs so you do not miss any possibilities (start with the smallest note and pair it with all larger notes).
  5. For each pair, check: are both notes less than US$100$, and are they different?

Follow-up Questions:

$1$. Write all the different totals you can make using $2$ different banknotes (each less than US$100$).
$2$. Explain how you know you have found all the possible totals.
$3$. Give at least $1$ way to pay exactly US$100$ using only banknotes, and state which notes you used.
👀 show answer
  • $1$: Using common US banknote values below US$100$ (US$1$, US$5$, US$10$, US$20$, US$50$), the different totals you can make with $2$ different notes are:
    US$1$ + US$5$ = US$6$
    US$1$ + US$10$ = US$11$
    US$1$ + US$20$ = US$21$
    US$1$ + US$50$ = US$51$
    US$5$ + US$10$ = US$15$
    US$5$ + US$20$ = US$25$
    US$5$ + US$50$ = US$55$
    US$10$ + US$20$ = US$30$
    US$10$ + US$50$ = US$60$
    US$20$ + US$50$ = US$70$
  • $2$: You can be sure you found them all by using a systematic method: fix the smaller note and pair it with every larger note exactly once. This prevents repeats (like counting US$10$ + US$5$ separately from US$5$ + US$10$) and guarantees no pair is missed.
  • $3$: One way to pay exactly US$100$ using only banknotes is: US$50$ + US$50$ = US$100$. Another example is: US$20$ + US$20$ + US$20$ + US$20$ + US$20$ = US$100$.
 

EXERCISES

$5$.Arun spent US$8$ and $60$c in the supermarket.

Which banknotes and coins could he pay with?

👀 Show answer

One way is to pay US$8$ with banknotes, and $60$c with coins:

• Banknotes: US$5$ + US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$ = US$8$

• Coins: $50$c + $10$c = $60$c

Here are some other examples (many answers are possible):

• Banknotes: US$10$ (then you would need $1$ dollar change back), and coins: $50$c + $10$c

• Banknotes: US$5$ + US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$, and coins: $25$c + $25$c + $10$c

• Banknotes: US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$ + US$1$, and coins: $20$c + $20$c + $10$c + $10$c

Any combination of US banknotes and coins that totals US$8$ and $60$c is correct.

 

EXERCISES

$6$.Find the total amount of money in each row and each column.

Two answers have been done for you.

3x3 grid of US banknotes and coins with row and column totals to find (two totals already shown)

👀 Show answer

Row totals

Row $1$: US$12$ and $50$c

Row $2$: US$5$ and $35$c

Row $3$: US$70$ and $5$c

Column totals

Column $1$: US$22$ and $25$c

Column $2$: US$5$ and $55$c

Column $3$: US$60$ and $10$c

 

Think like a Mathematician

Let’s investigate

Work on your own.

Think of a US coin or banknote.

Ask yourself questions, for example, “Is it a coin?” “Is it worth more than a dime?”

You can only answer yes or no.

Method:

  1. Choose one US coin or banknote and keep it secret (write it down so you don’t change it).
  2. Write three yes/no questions you could use to identify it (for example: “Is it a coin?”, “Is it worth more than a dime?”).
  3. Answer your own questions honestly with only “yes” or “no”.
  4. After the 3 questions, decide which coin or banknote it must be.

Follow-up Question:

1. Can you identify the coin or banknote after 3 questions?
👀 show answer

1: Sometimes yes, sometimes no — it depends on how “smart” your questions are.

To make it work in only 3 questions, pick questions that split the possibilities as much as possible each time (like a decision tree). A strong set is:

  • Coin or banknote?
  • If coin: worth more than a dime? (or “more than 25 cents?”)
  • Use the last question to separate what’s left (for example: “Is it a quarter?” or “Does it have Washington on it?”).

Math idea hiding inside: each yes/no question gives 1 bit of information, so 3 questions can distinguish up to $2^3 = 8$ possibilities if your questions split the choices efficiently.

 

What we've learned

  • We learned to recognise different currencies from around the world and understand that money has different values depending on the country.
  • We practiced using local currency to make specific amounts by combining coins and notes in different ways.
  • We used US dollars and cents to calculate totals, understanding that $1\ \text{dollar} = 100\ \text{cents}$.
  • We developed logical thinking by asking yes/no questions to identify a coin or banknote efficiently.
  • We explored how three yes/no questions can distinguish up to $2^3 = 8$ different possibilities.

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