Oh, dude, that's like asking me to do math on the spot. Okay, so if you have 64 sixth graders and you want to divide them into groups of 10 or fewer, you could have 6 groups of 10 and 4 left over, or 5 groups of 10 and 14 left over, or 4 groups of 10 and 24 left over. It's like playing a game of "how many ways can we divide these kids without losing our sanity?"
6.4
24 is the number that can be divided equally by 3 and 8
g/130=
2 groups of 16, 4 groups of 8, 8 groups of 4, 16 groups of 2. Not really divided or in groups, but there could be 1 group of 32 or everyone by themselves.
Five groups of five people. Simple math my dear.
6.4
42
9
You would divide 270 by 45 and the solution would be 6 students with each chaperon.
Yes. It can be divided into -- 21 equal groups of 1 each -- 3 equal groups of 7 each -- 7 equal groups of 3 each
42 because 24 divided by 7 = 6
they can be 2 groups of 16, 4 groups of 8, 8 groups of 4, or 16 groups of 2
6 ways. 32 divided by 1=32 32 divided by 2=16 32 divided by 4= 8 32 divided by 8 = 4 32 divided by 16= 2 32 divided by 32= 1
24 is the number that can be divided equally by 3 and 8
g/130=
2 groups of 16, 4 groups of 8, 8 groups of 4, 16 groups of 2. Not really divided or in groups, but there could be 1 group of 32 or everyone by themselves.
17.0588