Let’s solve each problem one by one. We’re finding the
unit rate, which means we want to know how much of something there is
per 1 unit (like per month, per person, per table, etc.).
To find a unit rate, we
divide the total amount by the number of units.
---
1.
48 books in 24 months
→ 48 ÷ 24 =
2 books per month
2.
45 tacos for 15 people
→ 45 ÷ 15 =
3 tacos per person
3.
72 chairs at 9 tables
→ 72 ÷ 9 =
8 chairs per table
4.
7 bags hold 42 avocados
→ 42 ÷ 7 =
6 avocados per bag
5.
60 slices in 5 pizzas
→ 60 ÷ 5 =
12 slices per pizza
6.
5 shelves hold 90 cans
→ 90 ÷ 5 =
18 cans per shelf
7.
132 players on 12 teams
→ 132 ÷ 12 =
11 players per team
8.
4 hours to drive 240 miles
→ 240 ÷ 4 =
60 miles per hour
9.
125 games in 5 seasons
→ 125 ÷ 5 =
25 games per season
10.
3 minutes to type 180 words
→ 180 ÷ 3 =
60 words per minute
11.
72 markers in 4 packs
→ 72 ÷ 4 =
18 markers per pack
12.
26 minutes to watch 4 videos
→ 26 ÷ 4 =
6.5 minutes per video
13.
128 plants in 8 rows
→ 128 ÷ 8 =
16 plants per row
14.
192 muffins in 16 batches
→ 192 ÷ 16 =
12 muffins per batch
15.
18 pints of juice in 8 bottles
→ 18 ÷ 8 =
2.25 pints per bottle
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Final Answer:
2 books per month
3 tacos per person
8 chairs per table
6 avocados per bag
12 slices per pizza
18 cans per shelf
11 players per team
60 miles per hour
25 games per season
60 words per minute
18 markers per pack
6.5 minutes per video
16 plants per row
12 muffins per batch
2.25 pints per bottle
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of finding unit rates worksheet.