Solving Problems with All Four Operations
Solving Problems with All Four Operations is a Grade 4 math skill in enVision Mathematics, Chapter 6: Use Operations with Whole Numbers to Solve Problems. Students learn to break complex multi-step word problems into a series of calculations using addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division.
Key Concepts
Property To solve complex problems, break them down into a series of smaller calculations. Often, you will need to perform multiplication or division first to find a subtotal, followed by addition or subtraction to find the final answer.
Examples Three friends buy 4 movie tickets for 15 dollars each and a large popcorn for 9 dollars. They use a 6 dollar coupon and split the final cost evenly. How much does each friend pay? Step 1 (Multiply): $4 \times 15 = 60$ dollars for tickets. Step 2 (Add): $60 + 9 = 69$ dollars for tickets and popcorn. Step 3 (Subtract): $69 6 = 63$ dollars after the coupon. Step 4 (Divide): $63 \div 3 = 21$ dollars per friend. A school buys 8 boxes of pencils, with 12 pencils in each box. The school already had 24 pencils. If the pencils are distributed equally among 10 classrooms, how many pencils does each classroom get? Step 1 (Multiply): $8 \times 12 = 96$ new pencils. Step 2 (Add): $96 + 24 = 120$ total pencils. Step 3 (Divide): $120 \div 10 = 12$ pencils per classroom.
Explanation Some problems require you to use all four basic operations: addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. To solve these, you must identify the hidden questions and determine the correct order of operations. First, perform any necessary multiplication or division to find intermediate amounts, such as a total cost or quantity. Then, use addition or subtraction to combine or adjust those amounts before performing a final division or other calculation to arrive at the answer.
Common Questions
How do you solve problems using all four operations?
Break the problem into smaller steps. Use multiplication or division first to find subtotals, then use addition or subtraction to combine or adjust those amounts to reach the final answer.
What is a multi-step word problem?
A multi-step word problem requires you to perform more than one calculation in sequence. You must identify the hidden questions and solve them in the correct order.
What is an example of a four-operations word problem?
Three friends buy 4 tickets at 15 dollars each plus 9 dollar popcorn, use a 6 dollar coupon, and split the total. Steps: multiply, add, subtract, divide to find each person pays 21 dollars.
In what order should you solve multi-step problems?
Typically, perform multiplication or division first to find intermediate totals, then use addition or subtraction to combine or adjust, and finish with any remaining operation required.
What grade covers multi-step problems with all four operations?
Solving problems with all four operations is covered in Grade 4 enVision Mathematics, Chapter 6: Use Operations with Whole Numbers to Solve Problems.