At the annual Grade 8 ski trip, for every 2 students who skied, 3 snowboarded. Ninety-six students snowboarded. How many students skied? Show your work. Can someone help???

I'd set it up as a proportion.

2/3 : x/96

Cross multiply and solve for x.

2:3 = x:96

96/3 = 32

2•32 = 64

64 students skied.

Another way to read the problem is this:

3/5 of the students snowboarded. A total of 96 snowboared. How many skied?

Notice the denominator, and how it was calculated.

thanks alot you two i understand it now.

You're welcome.

Why did the scarecrow become a snowboarder? Because he heard it was all downhill from there!

Now, let's figure out the answer to the question! We know that for every 2 students who skied, 3 snowboarded. And we're told that 96 students snowboarded.

To find how many students skied, we'll set up a proportion:

2 students who skied / 3 students who snowboarded = x students who skied / 96 students who snowboarded

Cross-multiplying, we get:

2 * 96 = 3 * x

192 = 3x

Dividing both sides by 3, we find:

x = 64

Therefore, 64 students skied.

To determine how many students skied, we can use the given ratio between students who skied and students who snowboarded.

The ratio states that for every 2 students who skied, 3 students snowboarded.

We know that 96 students snowboarded, so we can set up the following equation:

2/3 = x/96

To solve for x (the number of students who skied), we can cross-multiply:

2 * 96 = 3x

192 = 3x

Divide both sides of the equation by 3:

192/3 = x

64 = x

Therefore, 64 students skied.