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Conjectures

September14

sidney_harris_math07

A “conjecture” is an educated guess. I noticed something when I divided a whole number and a fraction so I’m making a “conjecture”. Your job is to see if my conjecture is always true, sometimes true, or never true. You will do this by checking my work and then positing your own 3 examples. If you cannot find an example that disproves my conjecture you should assume it is always true. If you can find even one example that disproves my conjecture you would conclude that my conjecture is sometimes true. In this example, we know that “never true” isn’t an option because my examples are true! Here we go:

I took 60 and divided it by 1/2 (not 2) and my calculator said the answer was 120.

60 ÷ (0.5) = 120

I took 10 and divided it by 1/4 (not 4) and my calculator said the answer was 40.

10 ÷ (0.25) = 40

I took 75 and divided it by 1/10 (not 10) and my calculator said the answer was 750.

75 ÷ (0.1) = 750

My conjecture: When you divide a whole number by a fraction the answer is more than you started with. Is this always true or sometimes true? In order to pick “sometimes true” you have to come up with an example that disproves my conjecture.

by posted under Math 7, Math 7/8, maths | 149 Comments »    
149 Comments to

“Conjectures”

  1. September 14th, 2014 at 2:29 pm      Reply jasminm2014 Says:

    I think its always true because all your answers are corrext and my calculator says the same thing.


    • September 14th, 2014 at 2:30 pm      Reply jasminm2014 Says:

      Correct


      • September 18th, 2014 at 9:51 pm      Reply jasminm2014 Says:

        3×1=3
        4×2=8
        5×3=15


        • September 20th, 2014 at 11:42 am      Reply jasminm2014 Says:

          This a correction for the other problems. I changed them because the whole numbers weren’t mutiplied by decimals.
          3×(0.2)=0.6
          5×(0.5)=2.5
          6×(0.1)=0.6


          • September 21st, 2014 at 8:48 am       ajellison Says:

            Good start Jasmin. Make sure you pay super close attention to the operations being used. My original conjecture was about dividing whole numbers by fractions.


    • September 21st, 2014 at 9:33 pm      Reply Jadyn Zamora Says:

      Always true . Ms.Ellison divided correctly and I did some questions to prove my answer was right . 82/(0.05)=1640 and 56/0.08=700 and they equal more than what I started with . With other fractions or improper fractions it doesn’t always work but is you use numbers in the hundredths place it always works.


  2. September 14th, 2014 at 8:18 pm      Reply lailav2014 Says:

    Always true because each time you divide a whole number
    By a decimal your answer is always bigger

    Examples:

    1. 10/(0.1)=100 the answer is always bigger

    2.100/(0.2)=500 the answer is always bigger

    3.1/0.1=10 the answer is always bigger


  3. September 15th, 2014 at 5:54 pm      Reply benjamind2014 Says:

    The conjuncture is always true. When a whole number is divided by a fraction it is always bigger than the whole number you started with.


  4. September 15th, 2014 at 7:17 pm      Reply Alexsandra Kisner Says:

    Always True:

    Because all answers were greater.

    #1 75 ÷ (0.2) = 375

    #2 50 ÷ (0.125) = 400

    #3 413 ÷ (0.375) = 1101.33333


  5. September 15th, 2014 at 7:18 pm      Reply cristiane2014 Says:

    Always true.


  6. September 16th, 2014 at 4:11 pm      Reply sydneyb2014 Says:

    The conjecture is sometimes true.
    16 divided by (0.25) (my moms tablet doesn’t have a lot of symbols (iPad mini))
    If you make 16 into 16/1 and 0.25 into 1/4 then you cancel out the 16 and the 4 , it makes the problem into 4/1 divided by 1/1 which equals 4. 4 is less than 16 so the conjecture is “sometimes true”


  7. September 16th, 2014 at 4:18 pm      Reply skylarr2014 Says:

    always true.
    I checked Ms. Ellisons answers and she divided correctly and I did some question to check like 45/(0.01)=4500 or 96/(0.75)=128
    and they all answered more than I started with. But if you use fractions like 1.5 or 1.2 then its sometimes true but Ms.Ellison wasn’t clear on the type of fraction we should use.


  8. September 16th, 2014 at 5:25 pm      Reply cierrag2014 Says:

    I think your conjecture is always true because all the problems gave the same answer as what the problem above have. The three examples I am giving is 19 divided by 0.3 and got 63.3… Which is bigger than 19. The second example is 20 divided by 0.4 and got 50 which is bigger than 20. The last example is 98 divided by 0.2 and got 490 which is bigger than 98. I think the conjecture is true for these reasons.


  9. September 16th, 2014 at 8:13 pm      Reply rachelre2014 Says:

    what I did was I took several whole numbers and divided them by fractions and found that I always ended up with more than I started with so I find this statement to be always true.


  10. September 16th, 2014 at 8:25 pm      Reply turiea2014 Says:

    Hey Ellison :0 it’s Turie in 5′ and I’d like to explain that if you devise any number by the fraction 1/10 you just add an extra zero like 80 and decide it by the fraction 1/10 you get 800 and the same exact thing with sixty you get 600 even with the number five you get fifty
    With love
    From
    BEYONCÉ (Turie)


  11. September 16th, 2014 at 8:55 pm      Reply dylann2014 Says:

    always true


  12. September 17th, 2014 at 6:58 am      Reply graciea2014 Says:

    My conjecture is that when you divide a whole by a fraction its only sometimes true. Sure when you divide a whole number by a proper fraction you get a bigger number than what you stared with, but when you divide a whole number by a improper fraction you get a smaller number.

    If you divide 4 by 1/2 you get 8
    4 divided by 0.5=8
    But when you divide 2by 8/5 you get 1.25
    2 divided by 1.6=1.2

    So that’s why when you divide a whole number by a fraction you only get a bigger number sometimes.


  13. September 17th, 2014 at 2:19 pm      Reply lisbeth fernado Says:

    the answer for this is going to de always true


  14. September 17th, 2014 at 2:49 pm      Reply alexaz2014 Says:

    i think it is true becuse i did these examples and i got more these are the examples :19divided by 0.5 and got 38 the next one was 13 divied by 0.75 and got 17.333333 tha explanes why i got it is true .<3 ;p


  15. September 17th, 2014 at 2:49 pm      Reply Anonymous Says:

    As i found out is the all you or your calculator are really just multiplying the whole number with the denominator. So your answer is going to end up being bigger then what you started with.


  16. September 17th, 2014 at 2:53 pm      Reply Anonymous Says:

    As I found out that it is true because all you or your calculator are just doing is multiplying the whole number with the denominator of the fraction. so the answer is going to end up being bigger then what you started with.


  17. September 17th, 2014 at 3:02 pm      Reply Wendy Ramos Says:

    ok well im new to this so sorry if i get it wrong! 🙁

    Alright,so in a calculater you cant put 1/4 so i learnd that you just have to put THE QUESTION in like the same way you did so just do that and you will find your answer! #hope its right!!!!!


  18. September 17th, 2014 at 3:04 pm      Reply landonc2014 Says:

    I did 70 divided by .5 and got 14O IT WORKED
    I did 1 divided by .5 and got 2 THAT ALO WORKED
    I did 246 divide by .5 and got 492 THIS WILL ALWAYS BE TRUE

    I did 5 divided by .25 and go 20 IT WORKED
    I did 90 divided by .25 and got 360 THIS WORKS TOO
    I did 500 divided by .25 AND THIS WILL ALSO ALWAYS BE TRUE

    I did 55 divided .1 and got 550 IT WORKED
    I did 25 divided by .1 and got 250 THIS ALSO WORKED
    I did 35 dividedby .1 and got 350 THIS IS ALSO TRUE

    this statement will be sometimes true


    • September 21st, 2014 at 9:50 am      Reply ajellison Says:

      Good start Landon! It seems that all of your examples proved my conjecture true. Why did you make the conjecture that it is “sometimes true”?


  19. September 17th, 2014 at 5:31 pm      Reply citlallym2014 Says:

    When you divide a whole number by a fraction the answer is more than what you started with. This conjecture is always true.

    I took 175 and divided it by 1/4 (not 4) and got 700 as an answer. Then I checked on my calculator to make sure.


  20. September 17th, 2014 at 7:00 pm      Reply audram2014 Says:

    the answer for this is always true because when you are devideing by a decimal it is like multiplying and no matter what number or decimal you divide by you always end up with more than you started with examples 13 divided by 0.5 = 26
    27 divided by 0.5 = 54.


  21. September 17th, 2014 at 7:23 pm      Reply bernicek2014 Says:

    This conjecture is always true when you divide a whole number by a fraction the answer is always more than what you started with. It is always true because if you are dividing a smaller number than your first number, your answer will turn out being bigger than your first number and your second number you had started with.
    Ex. ; 60 divided by (0.5) would be 120.
    Your first number is bigger than your second number but your answer is bigger than both of your numbers.


  22. September 17th, 2014 at 7:31 pm      Reply Tristin2014 Says:

    The answers to the problems are always true.
    1) 55 / (0.4) = 137.5
    2) 124 / (0.5) = 248
    3) 64 / (0.8) = 80


  23. September 17th, 2014 at 8:11 pm      Reply katiesa2014 Says:

    The answer is always true. Because both of your starting numbers are going to be smaller than your answer. It says in the question when you divide a whole number by a fraction, the answer is more than you started with. Both of your starting numbers are going to be smaller than your final answer.


    • September 21st, 2014 at 9:44 am      Reply ajellison Says:

      Katie…Where are your examples that support your conjecture?


    • September 22nd, 2014 at 6:00 pm      Reply Katisa2014 Says:

      here are my examples that support my conjecture.
      42 divided by 0.4 equals 105
      74 divided by 0.3 equals 246 with a repeating 6
      12 divided by 0.2 equals 60.
      So it’s always true that both your starting numbers will be smaller than your final answer. Sorry I didn’t put that in my first comment.


    • September 22nd, 2014 at 6:13 pm      Reply katiesa2014 Says:

      Here are my examples that support my conjecture.
      ———
      42 divided by 0.3 equals 140
      ———
      12 divided by 0.2 equals 60
      ———
      70 divided by 0.4 equals 175.
      ———
      So this proves that both your starting numbers are going to Be smaller than your final answer when you divide a whole number by a fraction. Sore I didnt include this in my last answer.
      (Also Im fixing the other one that I posted)


  24. September 17th, 2014 at 8:37 pm      Reply susanat2014 Says:

    The First problem is always true because 60 divided by 0.5 does equal 120 and some examples to prove it aré 40 divided by 0.2 equals 250, 30 divided by 0.3 equals 100, and 70 divided by 0.2 equals 350.
    The second problem is sometimes true because even IF you divide a whole nombre and a fraction the problem 10 divided by 0.27 disproves 10 divided by 0.25.
    Lastly the third problem is always true because i tried three other problem like 66 divided by 0.2 =330, 50 divided by 0.2=250, and 70 divided by 0.7=100. None of Them disprove the example


  25. September 17th, 2014 at 9:07 pm      Reply jeanettem2014 Says:

    1. 8/0.4= 20
    2. 9/0.75=12
    3. 36/0.4=90
    If you look at my three examples they demonstrate that it is always true because 20 is my answer and it is bigger than 8 which is what i started with .Also 12 is bigger than 9 and that’s what i started with.Same with the last one 90 is bigger than 36, so this would prove that it i always true.


  26. September 17th, 2014 at 9:21 pm      Reply danield2014 Says:

    I tested the conjecture that when divide a whole number by a fraction the answer is more that you started with, and I found out that it is always true. Examples:
    2 / 0.5 =4
    3 / 0.3 = 33.333333333
    78 / 0.8 = 97.5
    1,000,000 / 0.5 = 2,000,0000


  27. September 18th, 2014 at 8:16 am      Reply Jessica Lynn Demarco Says:

    i took 60 and divided it by 1/2 (not 2) and the calculator said the answer was 120.
    60divided(0.5)=120
    i took 10 and divided it by 1/4 (not 4) and the calculator said the answer was 40
    10divided(0.25)=40
    i took 75 and divided it by 1/10 (not 10) and the calculator said the answer was 750
    75divided(0.1)=750


  28. September 18th, 2014 at 8:19 am      Reply dayneo2014 Says:

    i think it is sometimes true because when u multiply 9 tenths by 24 you get about 27, and that is bigger than 24. but when you multiply an improper you would get a smaller than what you started with.


    • September 21st, 2014 at 9:39 am      Reply ajellison Says:

      Good start Dayne. Make sure that you pay very close attention to the operations being used in the original post. My conjecture was based on DIVIDING whole numbers by fractions.


  29. September 18th, 2014 at 8:25 am      Reply ericv2014 Says:

    when you dvide a improper fraction and some times true and somtimes not. 24 divided nine tensth and got 27.

    85 divided 1/8 and got 680

    420 divide 6/5 and got 350.


  30. September 18th, 2014 at 8:28 am      Reply ashleight2014 Says:

    Sometimes true, but if i divide it by a impropper fraction it’ll be lover than the answer than i got:
    FOR EXAMPLE:
    10 divided by 1 over 7 (fraction)=(answer,higher)
    22 divided by 20 over 21 (fraction)=(answer,higher)
    39 divided by 20 over 13 (impropper fraction)=(answer,lower than above)


  31. September 18th, 2014 at 8:28 am      Reply savannahs2014 Says:

    the first problem is true
    the second problem is true
    finally the third problem is true
    my first problem is 24/9/10=27
    my second problem is 85/1/8=650
    my third and final problem is 420/6/5=350
    the conjecture is sometimes true because not all came out with a bigger number so that makes the conjecture sometime true


  32. September 18th, 2014 at 8:29 am      Reply nicholast2014 Says:

    If you divide a improper fractoins the number can be smaller. so yhe anwser is somtimes true!


  33. September 18th, 2014 at 8:29 am      Reply jimenai2014 Says:

    My Conjecture: Sometimes true but if i divide by an improper fraction my answer is not always true.

    Ex1: I got 24 and divided it by 9/10 and got 27.

    Ex2: I got 85 and divided it by 1/8 and got 680.

    Ex3: I got 420 and divided it by 6/5 and got 350.

    NOT ALWAYS TRUE!!!


  34. September 18th, 2014 at 8:29 am      Reply alexam2014 Says:

    my conjectures it is not alwase true .If it is a inproper it gets smller .If it is proper it gets biggre.NOT ALWAYS TRUE!!!

    ex1: i got 24 and dived it by 9/10 and got 27

    ex2: i got 85 and dived it by 1/8 and got 680

    ex3: i got 420 and dived it by 6/5 and got 350


  35. September 18th, 2014 at 8:30 am      Reply anasm2014 Says:

    the first problem is true
    the second problem is also true
    the third problem is as well true
    my first problem of my own is 24\9\10=27
    my second problem is 85\1\8=680
    my third problem is 420\6\5=350
    sometimes the conjecture is true because the problems dont have to always come out with a bigger number so thats why the conjecture is sometimes true it is not always true though.


  36. September 18th, 2014 at 1:27 pm      Reply alesham2014 Says:

    yes it is rigth because i fond out that you can divided a frachion by any whole number and get a whole number but u have to change the frachion in to a desimle and then divided the number to get your answer for example 1/4 divided by 2=0.125 was what i got and hears another way u can do this problum 2 divided by 0.25=0.125 and tats why my answer is yes.


  37. September 18th, 2014 at 1:40 pm      Reply keltons2014 Says:

    Always true because you start with a big or small and you will get all the same answer even when you turn them around.


  38. September 18th, 2014 at 2:28 pm      Reply treya2014 Says:

    This always true because when you multiply whole numbers and fractions the answer is always lower than the number you started with. For example: 14×0.5= 7 but 14/.5= 28
    Example 2: 84x.2=16.8 but 84/.2=420
    Example 3: 2485x.8=1988 but 2485/.8=3106.25 Your conjecture is always true.


  39. September 18th, 2014 at 3:22 pm      Reply kateenaa2014 Says:

    This conjecture is always true. I know this because every time i multiplied a whole number by a fraction i got a bigger number. For example 15 divided by 1/2 is 30. Another example would be 9 divided by 1/4 is 36. My final example is 25 divided by 1/5 is 125.


  40. September 18th, 2014 at 3:24 pm      Reply jiannav2014 Says:

    Your conjecture is sometimes true. If you divide 0 by a fraction then your quotient won’t be more than you started with, it would be the same. For example, 0 ÷ 0.25 = 0, 0 ÷ 0.5 = 0, 0 ÷ 0.47 = 0. In any other circumstance, your conjecture is true, though.


    • September 21st, 2014 at 9:25 am      Reply ajellison Says:

      Very clever Jianna! I like how you disproved the conjecture with zeros. What if you divide by an improper fraction.


  41. September 18th, 2014 at 3:38 pm      Reply chasen2014 Says:

    We can tell that your answers are never true because even I did them on a calculator. So we can tell that these problems are always true


    • September 21st, 2014 at 9:24 am      Reply ajellison Says:

      Your answer is a bit confusing Chase. Make sure you reread your comment before you post. Also, where are your examples that prove your conjecture?


  42. September 18th, 2014 at 4:29 pm      Reply josiasp2014 Says:

    You’re conjecture is always true because I tried doing everything but it always becomes a higher number. Anyway I made a cconjection by saying if you multiply an even number by an even number you will always get a even number.
    26×10=260
    12×14=168
    8×42=336 it is always going to be an even number


    • September 21st, 2014 at 9:23 am      Reply ajellison Says:

      Make sure you pay close attention to the operations and instructions in the blog post. My conjecture was based on DIVIDING a whole number by a FRACTION.


  43. September 18th, 2014 at 4:38 pm      Reply Anonymous Says:

    The conjecture is always true if you are dividing by a fraction that is less than1 for example 100 divided by 1/100 equals 10,000 and 2 divided by 1/2 equals 4, but if you divide by a fraction that is greater than one it makes the conjecture sometimes true, for example 10 divided by 8/4 equals 5


  44. September 18th, 2014 at 4:43 pm      Reply Anonymous Says:

    The conjecture is always true only if the fraction you are dividing by is less than 1 for example 100 divided by 1/100 equals 10,000 and 2 divided by 1/2 equals 4, but if you are dividing by a fraction that is greater than 1 then the conjecture is sometimes true. For example 10 divided by 8/4 equals 5.


  45. September 18th, 2014 at 4:55 pm      Reply rheond2014 Says:

    Conjectures: When you divide a whole number by a fraction you get a higher number. In my opinion i think this is true because when i tried dividing a whole number by a fraction i kept getting higher numbers. Also,when i tried dividing i got close to the whole number but not below it. So ”i think” that Mrs.Ellison’s conjecture is correct.


  46. September 18th, 2014 at 5:18 pm      Reply haileyb2014 Says:

    This conjecture is sometimes true. Here are my 3 examples:

    10 divided by 1 1/4 = 8

    10/1.25= 8

    7 divided by 1/ 1/2=6.66667

    7/ 1. 05=6.66667

    8 divided by 1/4=32

    8/0.25=32

    The number has to be over 1 to be under your original number. If its not 1 and something your answer will be over.


  47. September 18th, 2014 at 5:32 pm      Reply alyssaj2014 Says:

    It is sometimes true.


  48. September 18th, 2014 at 6:48 pm      Reply kevina2014 Says:

    I think your conjecture is always true because i tried it with 3 different examples and all of my answers were more than what i started with:
    50/(0.10)= 500
    25/(0.5)= 50
    80/(0.10)=800


  49. September 18th, 2014 at 6:57 pm      Reply madisono2014 Says:

    It is always true. Because dividing by a fraction is like multiplying by the whole number of that fraction.


  50. September 18th, 2014 at 7:09 pm      Reply julianac2014 Says:

    Whenever you divide a whole number by a fraction, the answer will always be more than you started with. That’s because whenever you are multiplying a number by a fraction, you have to change the second number into its reciprocal and multiply the two numbers and multiply them instead of dividing them. For example, when you take 20 and divide it by 2/8, you get 80. since I switched 2/8 into 8/2, I multiplied 20 by 8 and 1 by 2. I got 160 over 2 which is equal to 80.That’s why whenever you multiply a number by a fraction, you get more than you started with.
    ———————————————————————————
    work:
    20/1 / 8/2 = 20/1 * 2/8

    20/1 * 2/8 = 160/2

    160/2= 80

    80 is more than 20.


    • September 21st, 2014 at 9:07 am      Reply ajellison Says:

      Great start Juliana! What happens if your dividing by an improper fraction? Also, make sure that you complete at least 3 experiments to prove your conjecture!


  51. September 18th, 2014 at 7:11 pm      Reply angeli2014 Says:

    I took 60 and divided it by 3/5 and my calculator got 50.

    60÷0.2=50

    I took thirty and divided it by 3/5 and my calculator got 160.

    30÷0.6=50

    I took 80 and divided it by 1/2 and my calculator got 160.

    80÷0.5=160

    When you divide a whole number by a fraction the answer IS ALWAYS more than what you started with!!!


  52. September 18th, 2014 at 7:16 pm      Reply angeli2014 Says:

    I took 60 and divided it by 3/5 and my calculator got 50.

    60÷0.2= 50

    I took thirty and divided it by 3/5 and my calculator got 160.

    30÷0.6=50

    I took 80 and divided it by 1/2 and my calculator got 160.

    80÷0.5=160

    When you divide a whole number by a fraction the answer IS ALWAYS more than what you started with!!!


  53. September 18th, 2014 at 7:26 pm      Reply shyannw2014 Says:

    This is always true i know this because i did as an example

    50 divided by (0.5)=250 which is more than what i started with.


  54. September 18th, 2014 at 8:04 pm      Reply brandonw2014 Says:

    His conjecture was true because when he divided a fraction by a hole number he got a larger number as a answer.

    30/.5=60

    90/.75=120

    70/.25=280

    as you can see by my examples I got a larger number.


  55. September 18th, 2014 at 8:18 pm      Reply walterm2014 Says:

    Always true because it just multiplying by how much it is trying to take out of. Example: 40÷1/2=80 half of 80 is 40; 20÷1/4=80 1/4 of 80 is 20;15÷3/4=20 3/4 of20 is 15


  56. September 18th, 2014 at 8:27 pm      Reply sydney Says:

    Sometimes true


  57. September 18th, 2014 at 9:21 pm      Reply Mason.M Says:

    for the first problem i got always true because after i divided 60 by 1/2 i got 120 and the i double checked it by converting 1/2 into a decimal (0.50) and still got 120. Then i did 120 divided by 1/2 and got 60 so i knew my anwser was right. For the second equation i got always true because after i divided 10 by 1/4 (0.25) i got 40 and to check i did 40 times 1/4 (0.25) and got 10. For the last equation i got always true too because when i divided 75 by 1/10 or (0.10) (0.1) i got 750 either way and to check i multiplied750 by 1/10 and it equaled 75 so i knew that my anwser was right.


  58. September 18th, 2014 at 9:28 pm      Reply christians2014 Says:

    I believe its all ways true because when you multiply a fraction i has to be larger than the number. If not you are doing something wrong such as dividing or subtracting.


    • September 21st, 2014 at 8:56 am      Reply ajellison Says:

      Make sure that you pay very close attention to the operation being presented in the blog post Christian. We were dividing not multiplying. 🙁


  59. September 18th, 2014 at 10:39 pm      Reply jaquelinev2014 Says:

    Your answer is always true because when I did those problems I divided like you did and got the exact same answers you got so your conjecture is always true.


  60. September 18th, 2014 at 10:40 pm      Reply rogeliop2014 Says:

    2×3=6
    3×4=12
    4×5=20
    5×6=30
    6×7=42

    Conjectures are true most of the time


  61. September 18th, 2014 at 10:58 pm      Reply samanthabo2014 Says:

    I think what you mean by this, Mrs.Ellison, is:

    47 divided by 1/8 (.125)= 356
    So I put 1/8 and got .125. Then I did 47/.125=356.
    The answer is BIGGER than the original problem, so Mrs. Ellison is right.

    83 divided by 4/8 (.5)=166
    First I did 4/8 and got .5, so I used that as my decimal. I entered 83/.5 (4/8) and got 166.
    The answer is still BIGGER then the problem, and Mrs. Ellison is still right.

    22 divided by 3/12 (.25)= 88
    I took 3/12 and got .25, so then I inserted that in to 22/.25 (3/12) and came out with 88.
    Answer…..Still…….BIGGER……Then…….Original…….Problem……..
    Mrs.Ellison………Still……..Right………!

    So in conclusion, I think I’ve proven that Mrs.Ellison is right with her conjecture.


  62. September 19th, 2014 at 6:46 am      Reply kaedenh2014 Says:

    I check the teacher work and got the same answer. The first thing I did was that I took 65 and I divided it by ¾ and my calculator said the answer was 86.66. The second thing I did was that I took 83 and divided it by ¼ and my calculator said the answer was 332. The third thing I did was that I took 56 divided by 0.2 and my answer was 280.
    Based on what I found by checking the teacher work and making my own examples I believe that her conjecture is always true because when I did my problems I always came up with a bigger answer.


  63. September 19th, 2014 at 2:53 pm      Reply rainf2014 Says:

    always true


  64. September 19th, 2014 at 3:08 pm      Reply mateoh2014 Says:

    Sometimes true: the reason it’s sometimes true is because you never said the fraction had to be proper so 5 divided by 10/5 would be 2.5. Also if you were to do 10 divided by 5/5 it would be 10 therefore not more nor less than what you started with


  65. September 19th, 2014 at 5:49 pm      Reply jaydinw2014 Says:

    true


    • September 21st, 2014 at 8:49 am      Reply ajellison Says:

      This does not provide any evidence that the conjecture is true. Please make sure you justify your thinking or I can not tell what you were thinking. 🙁


  66. September 20th, 2014 at 3:31 pm      Reply Allyson Says:

    My conjecture is when you divide a whole number by a fraction the answer is always more than what you started with.
    Ex. 8 / 0.21= 38.095 proving that is it always bigger than when it started.


  67. September 21st, 2014 at 3:38 pm      Reply maisyd2014 Says:

    always true because when you divide a whole number by a fraction it is always bigger. Examples: I took 30 and divided it by 5 my calculator got 60. i divided 50 by 0.5 and my calculator got 250. i took 8 and divided it by 0.21 and my calculator got 38.095. which proves the answer is always bigger.


  68. September 21st, 2014 at 5:11 pm      Reply teah2014 Says:

    Always true because when dividing whole numbers by decimals you have to move the decimals over which will make your answer larger than when you started, or less. Ex: 15 / (0.3)= 50 Ex2: 45 / (0.4)=112.5 Ex3: 56 / (0.33)=169.69697


  69. September 22nd, 2014 at 3:11 pm      Reply colev2014 Says:

    always true


  70. September 22nd, 2014 at 5:48 pm      Reply katarinam2014 Says:

    The conjecture would be true if the fractions you are dividing by are less than one for example 100 divided by 1/100 (.01) equals 10,000 and 2 divided by 1/2 (.5) equals 4. The conjecture is sometimes true if you divide by an improper fraction, for example 10 divided by 8/4 (2) equals 5, which is smaller than what you started with.


  71. September 25th, 2014 at 1:32 pm      Reply jadalynnv2014 Says:

    i think the answer is alway going to be true because we have to get numbers and connect the numbers to the answer try to make to true?


  72. September 25th, 2014 at 1:34 pm      Reply saulr2014 Says:

    first i divude 60 by 5 and i got 20
    and with my other question i divided 1 by 75 and got 75 and with my last quetsion my answer was 4
    and thats how i got my answers


  73. September 25th, 2014 at 1:37 pm      Reply Consuelo Says:

    Sometimes true: The reason it’s sometimes true is because you never said the fraction had to bve proper so 5 divided by 10/5 would be 2.5.


  74. September 25th, 2014 at 1:39 pm      Reply carmenc2014 Says:

    all of them are true because I have used all of my msth and the couculater to see if all the answer are true.


  75. September 25th, 2014 at 4:49 pm      Reply seans2014 Says:

    i think all of your questions are correct so your conjecture is true


  76. September 25th, 2014 at 8:02 pm      Reply fanel2014 Says:

    1.) 55 / (0.4) = 137.5

    2.) 124 / (0.5) = 248

    3.) 64 / (0.8) = 80
    (The answer to the problem is always true.)


  77. September 30th, 2014 at 3:06 pm      Reply BrandonM 2014 Says:

    All ways true because when you conjecture is made the answer is usually correct


  78. October 1st, 2014 at 5:54 pm      Reply emmabr2014 Says:

    I am sorry miss Ellison but I can not come up with any examples of my own so I am going to just assume that it is always true because you said that if we can not come up with an answer we should just assume that you are always right because you are always right because you are a math teacher. P.S, I think you are the greatest math teacher ever, also miss Taylor, but you to (: =-)


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