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UIL Number Sense Shortcuts Guide

The document provides a comprehensive guide on mental math shortcuts and tricks for the UIL State Number Sense Contest, including special numbers, mental calculations, and various math magic techniques. It outlines methods for multiplying and dividing numbers, finding least common multiples, and converting repeating decimals to fractions. Additionally, it includes examples and solutions to illustrate the shortcuts and strategies presented.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
59 views13 pages

UIL Number Sense Shortcuts Guide

The document provides a comprehensive guide on mental math shortcuts and tricks for the UIL State Number Sense Contest, including special numbers, mental calculations, and various math magic techniques. It outlines methods for multiplying and dividing numbers, finding least common multiples, and converting repeating decimals to fractions. Additionally, it includes examples and solutions to illustrate the shortcuts and strategies presented.

Uploaded by

Michael Matias
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

UIL Number Sense Contest

Basic Shortcuts for Beginners

Larry White

UIL State Number Sense Contest Director


texasmath@[Link]
[Link]
Special Numbers -- What Pops into Your Mind?

1728

1024

1331

289

1.732...

2.828...

3.141...

2.718...

1.618

Notes:

page 1
Mental Math -- How fast can you work these?

1. 12.5% of 64 =

2. 24 ƒ 0.1666... =

__
3. 27 ‚ 0.7 =

4. 75% of 88 is

5. 35 ƒ 0.625 =

6. 33 13 % of 24 =

Notes:

page 2
Math Magic (Number Sense Tricks)

A. Memorize the first 35 squares, the first 15 cubes, and


the square roots of 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, & 10.

B. Know the "One-sies" equivalents.


(Fractions-Decimals-Percents)

3 5
C. 5  3 = ? (Is it a trick? Is it magic? See proof)

D. Find the average of 25, 36, and 47 using a focus number.

E. LCM (24, 42) is ?

F. Write 0.1222... as a fraction.

G. (37 ‚ 13  19) ƒ 8 has a remainder of ?

H. 35 ‚ 35 = ? 35 ‚ 45 = ? 35 ‚ 55 = ? 35 ‚ 65 = ?

13
I. 16 ‚ 13 = ?

J. 53 ‚ 47 = ?

K. Change 234 base 5 to base 10.

L. 36 2  57 2 = ?
page 3
Math Magic (solutions and tricks)
3 5 4
C. 5  3 = 2 15 (Is it magic ?)

a b
b  a Proof

a b
Let x = b  a

(a2  b2 )
x = ab (common denominator)

(a2  b2 )
x2= ab 2 (subtract 2 from both sides)

(a2  b2  2ab)
x2= ab (common denominator)

(a  b)2
x2= ab (binomial square)

(a  b)2
x=2 ab (solve for x)

D. The average of 25, 36, and 47 is 36.

Using 35 as a focus number,


add 10 to 25; subtract 1 from 36; subtract 12 from 47
 10  1  12 = 3.
Since 3 divided by three numbers is 1, then 35 + 1 = 36.

E. LCM (24, 42) = 168

use GCF(24, 42) which is 6


24 ƒ 6 = 4 and 4 ‚ 42 = 168
page 4
F. 0.1222... = 11/90

12  1 = 11 and there is 1 repeater (hence the 9)


and 1 non-repeater (hence the 0)

G. (37 ‚ 13  19) ƒ 8 has a remainder of 4

37 ƒ 8 has remainder of 5, 13 ƒ 8 has remainder of 5,


and 19 ƒ 8 has remainder of 3
So, 5 ‚ 5  3 = 28 and 28 ƒ 8 has remainder of 4

H. 35 ‚ 35 = 1225 35 ‚ 45 = 1575 35 ‚ 55 = 1925 35 ‚ 65 = 2275

a5 ‚ b5 = a ‚ b  the integer portion of (a  b) ƒ 2


then put either 25 or 75 on the end depending on whether
(a  b) is even or odd
13 9
I. 16 ‚ 13 = 10 16

numerator ---> 16  13 = 3, and 32 = 9


whole number ---> 13  3 = 10

J. 53 ‚ 47 = 2491
difference of squares (50  3)(50  3) = 502  32 = 2491

K. 234 base 5 to base 10 = 69

2 ‚ 25  3 ‚ 5  4 ‚ 1 = 69

L. 362  572 = 4545

note 3 + 7 = 10 and 6 - 5 = 1
so (32 + 62 ) x 101 = 4545
page 5
SHORTCUTS

I. Multiplying numbers ending in 5

A. First digits are equal: 1) always ends in 25


2) multiply first digit by first digit plus 1

Ex: 35 x 35 = 3 x (3 + 1) and ends in 25 = 1225


65 x 65 = 6 x (6 + 1) and ends in 25 = 4225

B. First digits differ by 1: 1) always ends in 75


2) multiply smallest first digit by largest first digit plus 1

Ex: 45 x 35 = 3 x (4 + 1) and ends in 75 = 1575


65 x 75 = 6 x (7 + 1) and ends in 75 = 4875

C. First digits differ by an even number: 1) always ends in 25


2) add first digits and divide by 2
3) multiply first digits and add quotient from step 2

Ex: 65 x 25 = 6 x 2 + ((6 + 2)/2) and ends in 25 = 6 x 2 + 4 and ends in 25 = 1625


35 x 95 = 3 x 9 + ((3 + 9)/2) and ends in 25 = 3 x 9 + 6 and ends in 25 = 3325

D. First digits differ by an odd number: 1) always ends in 75


2) add first digits and divide by 2
3) multiply first digits and add integer part of quotient

Ex: 85 x 55 = 8 x 5 + (int((8 + 5)/2) and ends in 75 = 8 x 5 + 6 and ends in 75 = 4675


35 x 65 = 3 x 6 + (int((3 + 6)/2) and ends in 75 = 3 x 6 + 4 and ends in 75 = 2275

II. Multiplying by 11 or Teens

A. Multiply by 11: 1) bring down units digit


2) add two digits at a time
3) bring down first digit plus any carry

Ex: 72 x 11 = (7 + carry) & (7 + 2) & (2) = 7 & 9 & 2 = 792


84 x 11 = (8 + carry) & (8 + 4) & (4) = 8 & 12 & 4 = (8+1) & 2 & 4 = 924
134 x 11 = (1 + carry) & (1 + 3 + carry) & (3+4) & 4 = 1 & 4 & 7 & 4 = 1474

page 6
B. Multiply by teens: 1) multiply units digit of the teen times units digit
2) multiply units digit of the teen times other digits and add back
plus carry
3) bring down first digit plus any carry

Ex: 72 x 13 = (7 + C) & (3 x 7 + 2) & (3 x 2) = 7 & 23 & 6 = (7 + 2) & 3 & 6 = 936


164 x 12 = (1 + C) & (2 x 1 + 6 + C) & (2 x 6 + 4 + C) & (2 x 4) = 1968

III. Multiplying by 25 or 75

A. Multiply by 25: 1) divide by 4


2) last two digits 00, 25, 50, or 75 depends on the remainder

Ex: 64 x 25 = 64 ÷ 4 = 16 R 0 & and remainder digits = 1600


57 x 25 = 57 ÷ 4 = 14 R 1 & add remainder digits = 1425

B. Multiply by 75: 1) divide by 4


2) last two digits 00, 25, 50, or 75 depends on the remainder
3) multiply results by 3

Ex: 64 x 75 = 64 ÷ 4 = 16 R 0 & add remainder digits = 1600 x 3 = 4800


57 x 75 = 57 ÷ 4 = 14 R 1 & add remainder digits = 1425 x 3 = 4275

IV. Dividing by 25

A. Divide by 25: 1) multiply by 4


2) place decimal so the answer has 2 decimal places

Ex: 64 ÷ 25 = 64 x 4 = 256 & place decimal = 2.56


57 ÷ 25 = 57 x 4 = 228 & place decimal = 2.28

V. Multiplying by numbers when first or last digits total 10

A. Multiply when units digits total 10 and first digits are equal:
1) multiply first digit times first digit plus 1
2) multiply units digits

Ex: 43 x 47 = 4 x (4 + 1) & 3 x 7 = 4 x 5 & 3 x 7 = 2021


72 x 78 = 7 x (7 + 1) & 2 x 8 = 7 x 8 & 2 x 8 = 5616

page 7
B. Multiply when first digits total 10 and units digits are equal:
1) multiply first digits and add the units digit
2) square the units digit

Ex: 27 x 87 = 2 x 8 + 7 & 7 x 7 = 16 + 7 & 49 = 2349


43 x 63 = 4 x 6 + 3 & 3 x 3 = 24 + 3 & 9 = 2709

VI. Multiplying by difference of squares

A. Algebra: a2  b2 = (a + b)(a  b):


1) easiest to see shortcut by examples

Ex: 53 x 47 = (50 + 3) x (50  3) = 502  32 = 2500  9 = 2491


28 x 32 = (30  2) x (30 + 2) = 302  22 = 900  4 = 896

VII. Least Common Multiple

A. LCM(a,b) = a ÷ GCF x b: 1) find the greatest common factor (GCF)


2) divide one number by the GCF
3) multiply quotient times the other number

Ex: LCM( 8,14) --- GCF = 2 --- 8 ÷ 2 = 4 ---> 4 x 14 = 56 ---> LCM( 8,14) = 56
LCM(24,99) --- GCF = 3 --- 24 ÷ 3 = 8 ---> 8 x 99 = 792 ---> LCM(24,99) = 792

VIII. Division by 9

A. xyz divided by 9: 1) add x plus y plus z and put sum over 9 (be sure to reduce)
2) add x plus y plus carry
3) bring down x plus carry

Ex. 201 ÷ 9 = (2 + C) & (2 + 0 + C) & (2 + 0 + 1)/9 = 22 3/9 = 22 1/3


1240 ÷ 9 = (1 + C) & (1 + 2 + C) & (1 + 2 + 4 + C) & (1 + 2 + 4 + 0)/9 = 137 7/9

IX. Multiplying numbers close to 100

A. Numbers close to and below 100:


1) A = 100 minus first number and B = 100 minus second number
2) subtract A from the second number (or vice versa)
3) multiply A and B

Ex. 96 x 99 --> A = 4 & B = 1 --> 99  4 (or 96  1) = 95 --> 4 x 1 = 4 --> 96 x 99 = 9504


92 x 97 --> A = 8 & B = 3 --> 97  8 (or 92  3) = 89 --> 8 x 3 = 24 --> 92 x 97 = 8924

page 8
B. Numbers close to and above 100:
1) A = first number minus 100 and B = second number minus 100
2) add A to the second number (or vice versa)
3) multiply A and B

Ex. 106 x 103 --> A = 6 & B = 3 --> 6 + 103 (or 3 + 106) = 109 --> 6 x 3 = 18 --> 10918
112 x 105 --> A = 12 & B = 5 --> 12 + 105 (or 5 + 112) = 117 --> 12 x 5 = 60 --> 11760

X. Repeating decimals converted to fractions

A. All digits repeat:


1) the number of digits that repeat is the number of 9's in the denominator
2) one set of the repeating digits is the numerator (be careful to reduce)
__
Ex: 0.13 --> two repeaters means two 9's --> 13/99
0.341341341... --> three repeaters means three 9's --> 341/999

B. Some digits repeat and some don't:


1) the number of digits that repeat is the number of 9's in the denominator
2) the number of non-repeating digits is the number of 0's in the denominator
3) subtract the non-repeating digits from the number before repetition starts
for the umerator

Ex: 0.12424... --> two repeaters and one non-repeater means two 9's and one 0
--> 124  1 = 123 --> 0.12424... = 123/990
__
0.1235 --> two repeaters and two non-repeaters means two 9's and two 0's
--> 1235  12 = 1223 --> 0.12353535... = 1223/9900

page 9
UIL High School Number Sense Test Problem Sequencing
===========================================

Problem 1  20 ***
1) Addition, subtraction, multiplication, & division of
Integers, Mixed Numbers, Fractions, and Decimals
2) Order of Operations
3) Use of the Distributive Property
4) Comparison of Fractions and Decimals
5) Multiplication Short Cuts
6) Squaring Numbers
7) Conversion Problems (either way):
Percent/Fractions, English/Metric,
Roman Numerals/Arabic Numerals
8) Greatest Common Divisor (GCD) & Least Common
Multiple (LCM)
9) Percent Problems
10) Mean, Median, & Mode
11) Sums of Integers
12) Remainder Problems
13) Consumer Type Problems
14) Number Theory Problems Involving:
Prime Numbers, Divisors, Sums of Divisors, etc.

Problems 21  40 ***
1) Powers of Numbers
2) Substitution
3) Word Problems
4) Inverses
5) Absolute Value
6) Ratio/Proportion
7) Square Roots/Cube Roots
8) Sets
9) Base System Problems
10) Solving Simple Equations
11) Simultaneous Equations
12) Repeating Decimals to Fractions
13) More Remainder Type Problems
14) Perimeter & Area Problems of Polygons
15) Sequences
16) Quadratic & Cubic Equation Problems

*** A type of problem from a particular section could appear later in the test.
Example: A base problem could appear as problem #55, but should not appear
earlier than problem #21.
page 10
Any questions on any of these?

(1) 2011  2010 = ____________________________

(2) 2010 ‚ 11 = _____________________________

(3) 211 q 122 = _____________________________

(4) 2010 ƒ 4 = ______________________ (decimal)

(5) .8  12 q 40% = ___________ (proper fraction)

(6) 18 ‚ 61  32 ‚ 61 = ______________________

(7) .075 = ___________________ (proper fraction)

(8) 32 ƒ 4  5 ‚ 6 q 1 = ______________________

(9) 345 ƒ 9 = __________________(mixed number)

*(10) 24  135  678 q 90 = ____________________

(11) The sum of the positive integral divisors of 16 is _______

(12) 13 ‚ 18 = ________________________________

(13) 16 ‚ 16
19 = ________________ (mixed number)

(14) 32 ‚ 23 = _______________________________

(15) 14  18  24  28  34  38 = _____________

(16) The GCD of 96 and 72 is ___________________

(17) 28% of 30 = ______________________________

(18) 75% of a gallon is equivalent to ________ pints

(19) 25 ‚ 53 = _______________________________

*(20) 114 ‚ 280 = _____________________________

page 11
Any questions on any of these?

(21) The area of a square whose diagonal is 6" is ________ sq. inches

(22) The LCM of 72 and 96 is __________________

(23) (22  44 ‚ 8) ƒ 6 has a remainder of ________

(24) How many positive integral divisors does 48 have? ________

(25) 101101 ƒ 14443 = ________________________

(26) 49 ‚ 41 = _______________________________

(27) If a dozen red roses cost $35.60 then three red roses cost $ _______

(28) (13)2 = __________________________________

(29) 3 45 q 6 78 = ________________ (mixed number)

*(30) 16875 ƒ 129 = ____________________________

(31) (15)2  (45)2 = ___________________________

(32) How many positive integers less than 20 are relatively prime to 20? _______

(33) 28% of 32 is 56% of ______________________

(34) If 3x  5 = 4x q 9, then x = ________________

(35) 4 27 ‚ 4 57 = ________________ (mixed number)

(36) The set {e,m,p,t,y} has _____ improper subsets

(37) (11)3 = __________________________________

(38) Round È 2  È 3 to the 10


1
place. ________

(39) .3222... = ________________________ (fraction)

*(40) È 21347 = _______________________________

page 12

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