AMC 8 · 2010 · #5
Easy mode Grade 6Problem
Alice wants to change a light bulb in her kitchen. The bulb hangs 10 centimeters below the ceiling. The ceiling is 2.4 meters above the floor. (Remember, 1 meter is 100 centimeters.)
Alice is 1.5 meters tall. When she stretches her arm up, she can reach 46 centimeters above the top of her head.
She stands on a stool, and now she can just barely touch the bulb.
How tall is the stool, in centimeters?
Pick an answer.
AMC 8 2010 problem © Mathematical Association of America (MAA AMC). Reproduced for educational use.
Try it yourself first — the explanation is most useful after you’ve attempted it.
Toolkit + CCSS Solution
Understand
Restated: Alice must change a light bulb that hangs $10$ cm below a ceiling $2.4$ m above the floor. She is $1.5$ m tall and can reach $46$ cm above her head. Standing on a stool, she can just barely touch the bulb. How tall is the stool, in centimeters?
Givens: Ceiling height $= 2.4$ m above the floor; Light bulb hangs $10$ cm below the ceiling; Alice's height $= 1.5$ m; Alice's reach above her head $= 46$ cm; Standing on the stool, Alice just reaches the bulb; Answer choices: (A) $32$, (B) $34$, (C) $36$, (D) $38$, (E) $40$ (cm)
Unknowns: The height of the stool in centimeters
Understand
Restated: Alice must change a light bulb that hangs $10$ cm below a ceiling $2.4$ m above the floor. She is $1.5$ m tall and can reach $46$ cm above her head. Standing on a stool, she can just barely touch the bulb. How tall is the stool, in centimeters?
Givens: Ceiling height $= 2.4$ m above the floor; Light bulb hangs $10$ cm below the ceiling; Alice's height $= 1.5$ m; Alice's reach above her head $= 46$ cm; Standing on the stool, Alice just reaches the bulb; Answer choices: (A) $32$, (B) $34$, (C) $36$, (D) $38$, (E) $40$ (cm)
Plan
Primary tool: #8 Analyze the Units
Secondary: #7 Identify Subproblems
Every length in this problem is a vertical distance, so the entire problem is a single one-dimensional sum: stool $+$ Alice $+$ overhead reach $=$ floor-to-bulb height. Tool #8 (Analyze the Units) is the gating move because the data is mixed in meters and centimeters; converting everything to cm first makes the arithmetic trivial. Tool #7 (Identify Subproblems) then splits the calculation into two small targets — (a) the bulb's height above the floor, and (b) Alice's reach without the stool — so the final equation reduces to one subtraction.
Execute — Answer: B
5.MD.A.1 Step 1 - Convert the meter measurements to centimeters so every length uses the same unit.
- Using $1$ m $= 100$ cm, the ceiling becomes $240$ cm and Alice's height becomes $150$ cm; the $10$ cm and $46$ cm values are already in centimeters.
💡 Converting m to cm inside the metric system is exactly the Grade 5 "convert standard measurement units" standard.
4.MD.A.2 Step 2 - Find subproblem (a): the bulb's height above the floor.
- The bulb hangs $10$ cm below the ceiling, so subtract that from the ceiling height.
💡 Reading "$10$ cm below the ceiling" as a subtraction is the standard Grade 4 distance word-problem move.
4.MD.A.2 Step 3 - Find subproblem (b): Alice's reach without the stool.
- Add her height to the distance she can reach above her head.
💡 Stacking two vertical lengths (her body, then her arm above her head) is a Grade 4 length word-problem skill.
6.EE.B.7 Step 4 - Set up the "just reaches" equation.
- Let $s$ be the stool height in centimeters.
- Standing on the stool, Alice's reach is $s + 196$ cm, and this must equal the bulb's height $230$ cm.
💡 Translating "just reaches" into a one-variable equation is Grade 6 expression-and-equation work.
6.EE.B.7 Step 5 Solve for $s$ by subtracting $196$ from both sides.
💡 Inverse operations on a one-step equation give the stool height directly.
5.MD.A.1 Convert the meter measurements to centimeters so every length uses the same unit 4.MD.A.2 Find subproblem (a): the bulb's height above the floor. The bulb hangs $10$ cm b 4.MD.A.2 Find subproblem (b): Alice's reach without the stool. Add her height to the dist 6.EE.B.7 Set up the "just reaches" equation. Let $s$ be the stool height in centimeters. 6.EE.B.7 Solve for $s$ by subtracting $196$ from both sides. Review
Reasonableness: A $34$ cm stool is about $13$ inches tall — a short kitchen step stool, which fits the everyday setting. Sanity check the totals: $34 + 150 + 46 = 230$ cm, and $240 - 10 = 230$ cm, so reach-on-stool exactly matches bulb height. The other choices either leave Alice short of the bulb ($32$ cm gives $228 < 230$) or overshoot it ($36$ cm gives $232 > 230$), so $34$ is the unique fit.
Alternative: Tool #6 (Guess and Check) on the choices: for each candidate $s$, compute $s + 196$ and compare to $230$. (A) $32 + 196 = 228$; (B) $34 + 196 = 230$ ✓; (C) $36 + 196 = 232$; (D) $38 + 196 = 234$; (E) $40 + 196 = 236$. Only (B) gives the exact reach.
CCSS standards used (min grade 6)
5.MD.A.1Convert among different-sized standard measurement units within a given system (Converting the ceiling height ($2.4$ m to $240$ cm) and Alice's height ($1.5$ m to $150$ cm) so every length is in centimeters.)4.MD.A.2Solve word problems involving distances, time, liquid volumes, and money (Combining the given lengths into the bulb's floor height ($240 - 10 = 230$ cm) and Alice's standing reach ($150 + 46 = 196$ cm).)6.EE.B.7Solve real-world and mathematical problems by writing and solving equations of the form $x + p = q$ (Modeling "just reaches" as $s + 196 = 230$ and solving the one-step linear equation to get $s = 34$ cm.)
⭐ Once every length is in the same unit, this AMC 8 problem is just one Grade 6 equation: $s + 196 = 230$.
⭐ Once every length is in the same unit, this AMC 8 problem is just one Grade 6 equation: $s + 196 = 230$.
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