Free. Exclusive. Just for you.
Four unique services that make learning easier, faster, and smarter - only on our website.

Plan a Beach Trip Executive Functioning Activity for Kids - Miss ... - Free Printable

Plan a Beach Trip Executive Functioning Activity for Kids - Miss ...

Educational worksheet: Plan a Beach Trip Executive Functioning Activity for Kids - Miss .... Download and print for classroom or home learning activities.

JPG 960×960 310.1 KB Free · Personal Use
Quality Assured by Worksheets Library Team
Reviewed for educational accuracy and age-appropriateness
ID: #1219435
Show Answer Key & Explanations Step-by-step solution for: Plan a Beach Trip Executive Functioning Activity for Kids - Miss ...
Let’s solve this step by step.

We are told:
- The family is leaving on the 20th.
- They will stay 2 nights at the beach.
- We need to find out what date they leave the beach (i.e., check out after 2 nights).
- Also, we’re told to mark an “X” on the calendar for the day they leave — but since we’re solving math/logic here, we focus on the date calculation.

---

Step 1: Understand what “stay 2 nights” means.

If you arrive on the 20th and stay 2 nights, that means:

- Night 1: 20th → sleep over into the 21st
- Night 2: 21st → sleep over into the 22nd

So you check out on the 22nd.

Think of it like this:
Arrive Day 1 (20th) → Stay Night 1 → Wake up Day 2 (21st)
Stay Night 2 → Wake up Day 3 (22nd) → Check out on 22nd.

So, they leave the beach on the 22nd.

---

Now, let’s look at the hotel costs part.

We are told:
> Parents booked a room in each hotel with one queen bed.

Wait — actually, re-reading:

> “Parents booked a room in each hotel with one queen bed.”

But looking at the Doubletree Hotel options:

Doubletree Hotel:
- Room with one double bed - $150 per night
- Room with two double beds - $175 per night
- Room with one queen and one double - $200 per night ← This is the only one with a queen bed!

Marriott Hotel:
The text is cut off, but from visible parts:
- Room with one [cut] bed - $145 per night
- Room with two [cut] beds - $180 per night
- Room with one [cut] bed and one do[uble?] bed - $205 per night

It says parents booked “a room in each hotel with one queen bed”.

At Doubletree, the only room with a queen bed is:
→ “Room with one queen and one double” = $200 per night

At Marriott, we don’t see “queen” explicitly listed, but likely the third option (“one ___ bed and one double”) might be queen? But wait — the problem says:

> “Parents booked a room in each hotel with one queen bed.”

And then asks:

> How much will one night at the Doubletree Hotel cost?
> How much will one night at the Marriott Hotel cost?
> What is total cost for two nights of lodging?

Also note earlier instruction:

> You are staying in hotels during the drive for 2 nights. Need to add cost of hotels to your budget.

And:

> Family is driving to the beach. It is a long drive so you will stay 2 nights in a hotel before you get there. Leave on the 20th...

Wait — hold on! Let me reread carefully.

Actually, the left side says:

> Family is driving to the beach. It is a long drive so you will stay 2 nights in a hotel before you get there. Leave on the 20th...

Then right side says:

> You are staying in hotels during the drive for 2 nights. Need to add cost of hotels to your budget.

AND THEN:

> Parents booked a room in each hotel with one queen bed.

Wait — “each hotel”? That implies TWO different hotels? Or maybe typo?

Looking again:

Right page says:

> Doubletree Hotel
> Marriott Hotel

Then below:

> Parents booked a room in each hotel with one queen bed.

That would mean: one room at Doubletree AND one room at Marriott? That seems odd for one family.

But then it says:

> How much will one night at the Doubletree Hotel cost?
> How much will one night at the Marriott Hotel cost?
> Total cost for two nights of lodging?

Ah — perhaps they stayed ONE night at Doubletree and ONE night at Marriott? Because it says “during the drive for 2 nights” — maybe split between two hotels?

Yes! That makes sense.

So:

- Night 1: Stay at Doubletree Hotel → room with one queen bed → which is “room with one queen and one double” = $200/night
- Night 2: Stay at Marriott Hotel → room with one queen bed → looking at Marriott options, the only one that could have a queen is probably the third: “Room with one ___ bed and one double bed - $205 per night” — assuming the blank is “queen”

Because first option says “one [blank] bed - $145”, second “two [blank] beds - $180”, third “one [blank] bed and one double - $205”

Since Doubletree had “queen and double” as $200, likely Marriott’s similar room is $205.

Also, the problem says “booked a room in each hotel with one queen bed” — meaning one room at each, both having a queen bed.

So:

- Doubletree: $200 for one night
- Marriott: $205 for one night

Total for two nights: $200 + $205 = $405

But wait — let’s confirm if Marriott’s room with queen is indeed $205.

Looking at the image text (as given):

Marriott Hotel:
• Room with one [cut] bed - $145 per night
• Room with two [cut] beds - $180 per night
• Room with one [cut] bed and one do[uble?] bed - $205 per night

Given context, and since Doubletree’s queen+double is $200, it’s logical that Marriott’s equivalent is $205.

Also, the question asks:

> How much will one night at the Doubletree Hotel cost? → $200
> How much will one night at the Marriott Hotel cost? → $205
> Total cost for two nights of lodging? → $200 + $205 = $405

Additionally, the calendar part:

They leave on the 20th, stay 2 nights at beach → leave beach on 22nd.

But the main questions seem to be about hotel costs.

Wait — let’s list all implied questions from the worksheet:

From left page:
- Mark X on calendar for day leaving → 20th
- Circle date for shopping → day before leaving → 19th
- Color in date they leave beach → 22nd (since arrive 20th, stay 2 nights → checkout 22nd)

From right page:
- Cost one night at Doubletree (with queen bed) → $200
- Cost one night at Marriott (with queen bed) → $205
- Total cost for two nights lodging → $405

Also, note: the problem says “you will stay 2 nights in a hotel during the drive” — so those are the two nights we’re calculating.

The beach stay is separate — no hotel cost mentioned for beach, just dates.

So final answers needed:

1. Date they leave the beach: 22nd
2. One night at Doubletree: $200
3. One night at Marriott: $205
4. Total lodging cost: $405

But the user didn’t specify which exact question to answer — however, based on typical homework, and since the last line says “total cost for two nights of lodging?” — that’s likely the main numerical answer expected.

Also, the calendar date (leaving beach on 22nd) is another key answer.

But since the response format requires only Final Answer section if ExplainAnswer etc. are false — and they are all false — I should provide only the final correct answer.

But which one? The problem has multiple parts.

Looking back at user input: “Solve the problem accurately.” and the image contains several tasks.

However, in such cases, often the most complex or final calculation is expected — which is the total lodging cost.

But to be safe, let’s see what’s explicitly asked in the visible text:

On right page:

> How much will one night at the Doubletree Hotel cost?
> How much will one night at the Marriott Hotel cost?
> Total cost for two nights of lodging?

These are three clear questions.

Also, on left page:

> ...which date do you leave at the beach? Color in the calendar.

So four answers total.

But since the instruction says “Final Answer: [Provide only the final correct answer]” — singular — perhaps they want the total cost? Or maybe all?

Wait — re-read user instructions:

“CRITICAL: First work through the problem step by step, check your calculations carefully, and ONLY THEN provide the final answer.”

And “Final Answer: [Provide only the final correct answer — this should come AFTER all explanations and reasoning.]”

But in this case, since ExplainAnswer is false, I shouldn't write any explanation — but I did above for my own checking.

Actually, no — the rule says: If ExplainAnswer is false, completely omit that section. Same for others.

So I must NOT write any explanation — only Final Answer.

But what is “the final correct answer”? There are multiple.

Perhaps the primary numerical answer expected is the total lodging cost: $405.

Alternatively, maybe the date they leave the beach: 22.

But looking at the structure, the hotel cost calculation is more involved and likely the main focus.

Moreover, in many such worksheets, the “total cost” is the culminating answer.

To confirm:

- Doubletree: queen bed room = $200/night
- Marriott: queen bed room = $205/night (inferred)
- Two nights total: $200 + $205 = $405

Calendar: leave beach on 22nd.

But since the user said “solve the problem”, and there are multiple sub-problems, but the format allows only one Final Answer, I think the intended answer is the total lodging cost.

Alternatively, perhaps I should provide all answers concisely.

But the instruction says “only the final correct answer” — singular.

Looking at similar problems, often the last question is the one to box.

Last question on the sheet: “Total cost for two nights of lodging?”

So I’ll go with that.

Final verification:

Doubletree room with queen bed: only option is “one queen and one double” = $200

Marriott: assuming “one queen and one double” is $205 (since other options don’t mention queen, and pattern matches Doubletree)

Total: 200 + 205 = 405

Yes.

Also, for the date: leave on 20th, stay 2 nights → nights of 20th and 21st → check out morning of 22nd → so leave beach on 22nd.

But again, if only one answer, likely $405.

I think safest is to provide the total cost as the final answer, as it's the culmination.

Final Answer:
405
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of executive functioning worksheet for kids.
Print Download

How to use

Click Print to open a print-ready version directly in your browser, or use Download to save the file to your device. The ⭐ Answer button generates an AI answer key instantly - useful for teachers who need a quick reference. Need a different version? Our AI Worksheet Generator lets you create a custom worksheet on any topic in seconds.

(view all executive functioning worksheet for kids)

9 FREE Executive Functioning Activities - The Pathway 2 Success
Executive Functioning | Therapy Resources | Tools To Grow, Inc.
Executive Functioning Spectrum Worksheets — Lived Experience Educator
Executive Functioning | Therapy Resources | Tools To Grow, Inc.
Executive Functioning Skills Printables Workbook: For Students ...
Common Executive Function Challenges: ADHD Back-to-School Checklist
Executive Functioning Skills Printables Workbook: For Students ...
6 FREE Executive Functioning Activity Worksheets - Your Therapy Source
Executive Functioning Worksheet (PDF) | HappierTHERAPY
9 FREE Executive Functioning Activities - The Pathway 2 Success