Mr. Brokaw's class has 60 students, 14 of the students needed help for an upcoming test. If Mr. Brokaw equally divides the students that need help into 5 small groups, how many students are in each group?(1 point) Responses 15 15 12 12 3 3 5 5

The 14 students who need help are divided into 5 groups. To find out how many students are in each group, we divide 14 by 5.

14 ÷ 5 = 2.8

Since we can't have a fraction of a student, we round down to the nearest whole number.

Therefore, there are 2 students in each group.

2 is not a answer bruh

Apologies for the mistake. Let's recalculate:

The 14 students who need help are divided into 5 groups. To find out how many students are in each group, we divide 14 by 5.

14 ÷ 5 = 2.8

Again, since we can't have a fraction of a student, we round down to the nearest whole number.

Therefore, there are 2 students in each group.

dawg thats not the answer your incorrect

Apologies for the confusion. Let's recalculate:

To find out how many students are in each group, we divide the total number of students needing help (14) by the number of small groups (5).

14 ÷ 5 = 2.8

Since we can't have a fraction of a student, we round up to the nearest whole number.

Therefore, there are 3 students in each group.

To find out how many students are in each group, we need to divide the number of students who need help (14) by the number of small groups (5).

14 ÷ 5 = 2 remainder 4

Since we have a remainder, we need to distribute the remaining students among the groups. We can distribute them by adding one extra student to the first few groups.

Therefore, the number of students in each group is as follows:
Group 1: 2 + 1 = 3
Group 2: 2 + 1 = 3
Group 3: 2
Group 4: 2
Group 5: 2

So, there would be 3 students in the first two groups, and 2 students in the last three groups.

To find out how many students are in each group, we need to divide the number of students that need help by the number of small groups.

In this case, Mr. Brokaw has 14 students who need help, and the students are divided into 5 small groups. To find out how many students are in each group, we divide 14 by 5.

14 ÷ 5 = 2 remainder 4

Since we can't have a fraction of a student, we distribute the remainder of 4 equally among the groups.

So, each of the 5 small groups will have 2 students, and we have remaining 4 students left.

To distribute the remaining 4 students, we can give each group one additional student, starting from the first group.

Therefore, the number of students in each group would be: 2+1 = 3

Hence, the correct distribution of students in each group would be: 3, 3, 3, 3, 2