This MCQ module is based on: Mend the Mistake and History of Equations
Mend the Mistake and History of Equations
This mathematics assessment will be based on: Mend the Mistake and History of Equations
Targeting Class 7 level in General Mathematics, with Basic difficulty.
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7.3 Mind the Mistake, Mend the Mistake
Learning to spot and fix errors is as important as solving correctly. Below are six worked examples where a student made one or more slips. For each, your task is to (a) find the mistake, (b) describe it in words, and (c) redo the step correctly.
Student's work
4x + 6 = 10 4x + 10 = 6 4x = 16 − 10 x = 4
Student's work
7 − 8z = 5 8z = 7 − 5 8z = 2 z = 2 / 8 = 1/4
Student's work
2v − 4 = 6 v − 4 = 3 v = 3 + 4 = 7
Student's work
5z + 2 = 3z − 4 5z + 3z = −4 − 2 8z = −6 z = −6/8
Student's work
15w − 4w = 26 7w + 12 = 26 7w = 26 − 12 7w = 14 w = 2
Student's work
3x + 1 = −12 x + 1 = −12/3 x + 1 = −4 x = −5
- Sign-flip error: forgetting to change sign when moving a term across '='.
- Partial division: dividing only the variable term and not the constant.
- Wrong combine: combining unlike terms (a number with a variable).
Example 11 — Riyaz's Magic Trick
Riyaz asked Akash to perform the following steps:
- Think of a number.
- Subtract 3 from the number.
- Multiply the result by 4.
- Add 8 to the product.
- Reveal the final answer.
Akash's final answer was 24. Can Riyaz figure out the starting number? Yes — by translating the steps into an expression.
| Steps | Expression |
|---|---|
| Think of a number | \(x\) |
| Subtract 3 from the number | \(x - 3\) |
| Multiply the result by 4 | \(4(x - 3) = 4x - 12\) |
| Add 8 to the product | \(4x - 12 + 8 = 4x - 4\) |
Since Akash's final answer was 24, \(4x - 4 = 24 \Rightarrow 4x = 28 \Rightarrow x = 7\). So Akash thought of 7.
Quick rule to get the starting number from the final answer: add 4 to the final, then divide by 4. \( \dfrac{24 + 4}{4} = 7\).
Example 12 — Ramesh and Suresh's Marbles
Ramesh and Suresh have 60 marbles between them. Ramesh has 30 more marbles than Suresh. How many marbles does each boy have?
Let Ramesh have \(x\) and Suresh have \(y\). We have two unknowns but two conditions:
- \(x + y = 60\) (total marbles)
- \(x - y = 30\) (Ramesh has 30 more)
Using the second equation, \(x = y + 30\). Substituting into the first: \(y + 30 + y = 60 \Rightarrow 2y + 30 = 60 \Rightarrow 2y = 30 \Rightarrow y = 15\). So Suresh has 15 and Ramesh has 45.
Here is a chain of transformations starting from \(y + 1 = 6\) and \(3y = 15\), where one is obtained from the previous by performing the same operation on both sides. Can you find the value of the unknown in each equation?
| Chain from \(y + 1 = 6\) | Same op on \(3y = 15\) |
|---|---|
| \(y + 1 = 6\) | \(3y = 15\) |
| Multiplying by \(-1\): \(-y - 1 = -6\) | Adding 6: \(3y + 6 = 21\) |
| Adding \(y\): \(-1 = -6 + y\) | Dividing by 3: \(y + 2 = 7\) |
| \(5 = y\) | \(y \times 2 = 7 \times 2 \Rightarrow 2y = 10\) |
7.4 A Pinch of History
Forming expressions using symbols and solving equations with unknowns is a very important component of mathematical exploration in algebra?. This story of algebra in India goes back thousands of years.
We have seen Brahmagupta's contributions to different areas of mathematics like integers and fractions. In Chapter 18 of his book Brāhmasphuṭasiddhānta (628 CE), he also explained how to add, subtract, and multiply unknown numbers using letters — the way we do today. This book was one of the earliest known works in algebra in history.
As renowned mathematician and Fields Medallist David Mumford puts it, "Brahmagupta is the key person in the creation of algebra as we know it."
In the 8th century, Indian mathematical ideas were translated into Arabic. They influenced a well-known mathematician named Al-Khwarizmi, who lived in present-day Iraq. Around 825 CE, he wrote a book called Hisab al-jabr wal-muqābala, which means "calculation by restoring and balancing." These ideas spread even further. By the 12th century, Al-Khwarizmi's book was translated into Latin and brought to Europe, where it became very popular. The word al-jabr from his book gave us the word algebra, which we also still use today.
Ancient Indian notation vs Modern Notation
| Modern Notation | Ancient Indian Notation |
|---|---|
| \(2x + 1\) | yā 2 rū 1 (in each term the indication of unknown/known comes first) |
| \(2x - 8\) | yā 2 rū 8̄ (a dot over the number indicates it is negative) |
| \(3x + 4 = 2x + 8\) | yā 3 rū 4 / yā 2 rū 8 (the two sides of an equation were presented one below the other) |
The symbols 'yā' (yāvattāvat) and 'rū' (rūpa) stood for the variable and the known number respectively. Brahmagupta also used colour-names to distinguish several different unknowns — kāla (black), nīla (blue), and so on. In place of a second variable, Indian mathematicians used particular letters (not the first letters of the colour names) that recurred systematically — much as we use \(x\) and \(y\) today.
Example 16 — Bijjaṇita (a problem from Bhāskarāchārya, 1150 CE)
One man has ₹300 rupees and 6 horses. Another man has 10 horses and ₹100 debt. If they are equally rich and the price of each horse is the same, tell me the price of one horse.
Solution: Let price of one horse = \(x\). According to the problem,
\(300 + 6x = 10x - 100\)
Subtract \(6x\) both sides: \(300 = 4x - 100\). Add 100 both sides: \(400 = 4x\). Divide by 4: \(x = 100\). Therefore the price of one horse is ₹100.
The power of a general formula
Such problems and solutions were well understood in ancient India. In fact, a very systematic way to solve problems with single unknowns was first proposed by Āryabhaṭa (499 CE) and Brahmagupta has outlined it in his Brāhmasphuṭasiddhānta (628 CE). Let us understand his method.
Let us look at a few equations of the following form:
\(5x + 4 = 3x + 8,\ 2x = 6 - 2x,\ 2x + 4 = 2\)
Can we come up with a formula to solve these equations? That is, for the first equation, can we perform some operations using 5, 4, 3 and 8 that will directly give us the solution? Using a similar method, can you solve the second equation using the numbers 5, ~6, 2 and 4?
To get a formula, we can generalise equations of this form by taking the four numbers as A, B, C and D. That is:
\(Ax + B = Cx + D\)
Brahmagupta's solution to equations of this form:
\(x = \dfrac{D - B}{A - C}\)
Using this approach, we can find the solution to the equation: \(650 + 4000 = 500m + 5050\), giving \(m = \dfrac{5050 - 4000}{650 - 500} = \dfrac{1050}{150} = 7\).
- Think of four operations you will ask your friend to do (e.g., +5, ×2, −3, ÷2).
- Let \(x\) be the starting number. Write the expression after each step.
- Simplify the final expression. If your friend's final answer is \(F\), solve for \(x\) in terms of \(F\).
- Test the trick: ask your friend to think of a number, follow the steps, and tell you the final answer. Use your formula to name the starting number.
- Modify step 2 so the formula becomes \(x = F/2 + 1\). Challenge: design steps that give this formula.
Example: +5, ×2, −3, ÷2 gives \((2(x+5) - 3)/2 = x + \tfrac{7}{2}\). So starting number \(= F - 3.5\). If friend says "10.5", you say "7"!
Figure it Out (Section 7.3 & 7.4)
Competency-Based Questions
R: When \(A = C\), the \(x\)-terms cancel and we are left with \(B = D\), which is either always true or always false.
R: Al-Khwarizmi's 9th-century book introduced the word into Latin translations read across Europe.
R: Moving a term across '=' requires changing its sign.