Expand mobile version menu

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Math -- Solution

You are a bison farmer worried about the condition of your animals over the long hard winter. You decide to give them extra feed. Here is what you calculate:

You have determined that you will feed the bison a mix of 60/40 oats and barley. This means the mixture of grain you create will be 60 percent oats and 40 percent barley.

  1. If you feed bison A 8 pounds of grain, how much barley do you give him? How much oats?

    8 pounds x 0.6 = 4.8 pounds
    You will feed the bison 4.8 pounds of oats.

    8 pounds total - 4.8 pounds oats = 3.2 pounds barley
    You will feed bison A 3.2 pounds of barley.

  2. If you feed bison B 6 pounds of grain, how much barley do you give him? How much oats?

    6 pounds x 0.6 = 3.6 pounds
    You will feed this bison 3.6 pounds of oats.

    6 pounds total - 3.6 pounds oats = 2.4 pounds of barley
    You will feed bison B 2.4 pounds of barley.

  3. You also truck extra hay out to the feeders. You decide to give each bison 2 flakes of hay. If you have 144 bison to feed, and each bale of hay is made up of 12 flakes of hay, how many bales will you have to take out to the pasture? How many flakes of hay?
    2 flakes per bison x 144 bison = 288 flakes

    You will need 288 flakes of hay. Each bale has 12 flakes of hay.
    288 / 12 = 24
    You will need to take out 24 bales of hay to the bison.

"Running a business like a farm takes business math skills as well," says Steve Warrington.


Contact

  • Email Support
  • 1-800-GO-TO-XAP (1-800-468-6927)
    From outside the U.S., please call +1 (424) 750-3900
  • North Dakota Career Resource Network
    ndcrn@nd.gov | (701) 328-9733

Support