Unit Conversions Jeopardy! Rules – Everyone not at the board needs to work the problems out on...

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Unit Conversions Jeopardy!

• Rules– Everyone not at the board needs to work the

problems out on their own– You must show your work and include units– Team members may help, but you only get half

points– You may use your reference sheet, for half points– Until all 100-300 questions are gone, you cannot

pick 400 or 500 point questions

Comparing Units

Conversion Factors

Unit Conversions %ages % Change

Tax, Markup, Discount

100 100 100 100 100 100

200 200 200 200 200 200

300 300 300 300 300 300

400 400 400 400 400 400

500 500 500 500 500 500

Comparing Units – 100

Which is larger: kg or lb?

kg

Comparing Units – 200

Which is smaller: cm or in?

in

Comparing Units – 300

Which is larger: gal or L?

gal

Comparing Units – 400

Which is larger: km or mi?

mi

Comparing Units – 500

Which is smaller: ft or m?

m

Conversion Factors – 100

Write the conversion between lb and kg.

2.2 lb = 1 kg

Conversion Factors – 200

Write the conversion between in and cm.

1 in = 2.54 cm

Conversion Factors – 300

Write the conversion between gal and L.

1 gal = 3.78 L

Conversion Factors – 400

What is the conversion between mg and g?

1000 mg = 1 g

Conversion Factors – 500

What is the conversion between mi and km?

0.6 mi = 1 km

Unit Conversions – 100

How many kg in 18 lbs?

39.6 lb

Unit Conversions – 200

How many liters in 8 gallons?

30.2 L

Unit Conversions – 300

You drive in a 35 mile per hour zone at 49 kilometers per hour. Are you speeding?

No. You’re going about 29.4 mi/hr, because 49 km converts to 29.4 mi.

Unit Conversions – 400

How many feet in 800 cm?

26.2 ft

Unit Conversions – 500

You start a trip with your odometer at 650.2 miles. You finish it at 922.9 miles. If you then fill up your tank with 12.438 gallons of gas, what was your gas mileage (in miles per gallon) on the trip?

By subtracting, you find that you drove 272.7 miles on this trip. Then since you want miles per gallon, you need to divide miles by gallons (this is what “per” means). Answer: 21.9 mi/gal.

%ages – 100

What is 8% of 97?

7.76 = 7.8

%ages – 200

What is 116% of 45?

52.2

%ages – 300

What percent of 22 is 6?

27.3%

%ages – 400

What percent of 85 is 89?

104.7%

%ages – 500

If your class has 24 people, but 5 are absent, what is the attendance rate (as a percentage)?

79.2%

% Change– 100

A stock’s share goes from $24 to $26.04. What was the percent change of the stock’s value?

8.5%

% Change – 200

A deer population one year is 25; the next year it is 34. What was the percent change of this particular deer population?

36%

% Change – 300

Your account has $540.23 in it on Sunday. By Friday, it only has $302.10. What was the percent change?

-44.1%

% Change – 400

The United States goes from 300 million people to 340 million people. What is the percent change in population? (Hint: since both are in millions, ignore the millions and just work with the 300 and 340.)

13.3%

% Change – 500

You estimate that a stack of cards has 28 cards in it. Someone counts these and finds there were actually 31. What was the percent error of your estimation? (Hint: Compare the error with how many there actually were.)

-9.7%

Tax, Markup, Discount – 100

How much will you pay if you put a 18% tip onto a $65.23 restaurant bill? (The answer is not “too much!”)

$76.97

Tax, Markup, Discount – 200 How much will you pay for a refrigerator that

was sold to the retailer for $450, but has a markup of 26%?

$567

Tax, Markup, Discount – 300

How much will you pay before tax for a $130 TV if you are offered a 4% discount for a July 4th sale?

$124.80

Tax, Markup, Discount – 400

You get a discount of $8 on a $30 purchase if you just take the Kohl’s credit card. But you also have a 20% off coupon. Which will have you pay the least for this purchase?

You’ll save $8 with the credit card, but you’ll only save $6 with the coupon. On the other hand, it’s still a little dangerous to have too many credit cards…I’d use the coupon

Tax, Markup, Discount – 500

You want to buy a salt block for $29.50. You have a 10% off coupon, but you know there will be a 6% sales tax added on after that. You only have $28. Do you have enough?

No. You’ll be charged $28.14, so you’re 14 cents short.

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