Question: MIlle is making snack packs for her kindergarten class. She's going to divide 64 pretzels, four times as many goldfish, and 32 suckers into baggies for the 16 kids in the class. How many items does each baggie have?
Answer: Step-by-step reasoning process: First find the total number of goldfish Millie adds: 64 pretzels * 4 goldfish / pretzel = 256 goldfish. Then add the number of each kind of snack to find the total: 256 goldfish + 64 pretzels + 32 suckers = 352 snacks. Then divide the total number of snacks by the number of baggies to find the number of snacks per baggie: 352 snacks / 16 baggies = 22 snacks / baggie.
So the answer is 22.

Question: Mark has two dozen eggs to split with his three siblings. How many eggs does each person get to eat if they all eat the same amount?
Answer: Step-by-step reasoning process: There are 24 eggs because 2 x 12 = 24. There are four eaters because 1 + 3 = 4. They get 6 eggs each because 24 / 4 = 6.
So the answer is 6.

Question: Tropical Storm Sally brings 3 days of rain to southern Texas. The first day it rained 4 inches. The second day it rained 5 times as much as the first day, and the third day it rained 6 inches less than the sum of the first two days. How much did it rain on the third day?
Answer: Step-by-step reasoning process: First Day:4 inches. Second Day: 5(4) = 20 inches. Third Day: (4 + 20) - 6 = 18 inches.
So the answer is 18.

Question: Andrew works in a company that provides a generous vacation allotment: for every 10 days worked, you get 1 vacation day. If last year Andrew worked 300 days and took 5 days off in March and twice as many in September, how many more vacation days can Andrew still take?
Answer:
Step-by-step reasoning process: If for every 10 days worked Andrew earns 1 day of vacation, then over 300 days worked he would have earned 300 / 10 = 30 days of vacation. We know he took 5 days off in March and that in September twice as much. That means in September he took 5 * 2 = 10 days off. In total, Andrew has used 5 vacation days in March and another 10 in September. Therefore, he has used 5 + 10 = 15 vacation days. If Andrew earned 30 days of vacation but has only used 15, then he can still take another 30 - 15 = 15 days off.
So the answer is 15.