a teacher has 25 kids in her class. she has a bowl containing 25 chocolates. she wants to divide the 25 chocolates to the kids, in such a way that one chocolate should remain in her bowl

I guess she gives 24/25 of a chocolate to each kid.

Or, she can give 1/2 a chocolate to two of the kids, and a whole one to the others.

i think steve s right on the part that the she should give 24/25 of a chocolate to her so i just simplified it ad got the answer=0.96 of a chocolate to each child.......and if i m wrong ls correct me

To divide the 25 chocolates among the 25 kids in such a way that one chocolate remains in the teacher's bowl, you can follow these steps:

1. Give each of the 25 kids one chocolate. This way, you have distributed 25 chocolates to the students.
2. Now, you have 0 chocolates in the bowl and 24 chocolates given to the kids.
3. As the problem states that one chocolate must remain in the teacher's bowl, you can take one chocolate from any of the 25 kids and put it back in the bowl.

By following these steps, each kid will have one chocolate, and the teacher's bowl will have one chocolate remaining.