George and Dominic from St Nicolas C of E
Junior School sent us very clearly explained solutions to this
problem. Thank you! Here is what they wrote for the first part:
1. For the first question I worked it out by seeing that
number 3 was at $180^\circ$ and that meant I needed to divide 180
by 3, giving the angle in between each number. The answer was
$60^\circ$. By knowing this I could work out that number 2 was
$120^\circ$ away from zero anticlockwise and was $240^\circ$
clockwise from zero.
2. To work this out I did almost the same as I did with
question 1 except that I divided 180 by 4 instead. This gave me
$45^\circ$ between each number. By multiplying $45^\circ$ by 3
(which is how many numbers 5 is away from zero ) I got $135^\circ$.
This meant that I would have to either turn the dial $135^\circ$
clockwise or $225^\circ$ anticlockwise.
3. This was a little easier to work out because number 3 was a
quarter of the way round the dial meaning to get to it I either had
to turn it $90^\circ$ anticlockwise or $270^\circ$ clockwise.
4. This was harder than the previous questions because there
wasn't a number at the $180^\circ$ point. To work it out I divided
$360^\circ$ by 9. This gave me how many degrees I would have to
turn the dial to get to the next number. The answer was $40^\circ$.
This showed me that to get to number 3 I had to turn it either
$120^\circ$ anticlockwise or $240^\circ$ clockwise.
5. At first sight this looked really tricky but after thinking
about it wasn't. Number 12 is $180^\circ$ away from zero. Half of
12 is 6 and half of 180 is 90, meaning that to get to the number 6
I have to either turn the dial $90^\circ$ anticlockwise or
$270^\circ$ clockwise.
George and Dominic continued to explain how
they had gone about the second part of the solution:
The next five were the hardest questions because we couldn't
see where the zero was at the start.
A. For this question I worked out that 12 was $180^\circ$ from
zero and 180 divided by twelve is 15. This means that each section
is $15^\circ$ wide. There are 9 spaces between zero and nine which
means that to work out the answer we have to times 9 by 15 which
equals 135. So to get to 9 I have to turn the dial either
$135^\circ$anticlockwise or $225^\circ$ clockwise.
B. We found this one quite easy because again 6 was a quarter
of the way round, so this meant that we had to turn the dial
$90^\circ$ clockwise or $270^\circ$ anticlockwise.
C. First I worked out that 360 divided by 6 is 60 meaning that
each section is $60^\circ$ around the dial. Using this information
I worked out that I would have to turn the dial either $120^\circ$
clockwise or $240^\circ$ anticlockwise.
D. On this one I knew that 6 was at $180^\circ$ but you had to
work out what 5 was. So I did 180 divided by 6 which equals 30.
Then I did 180-30 which equals $150^\circ$ so it was $150^\circ$
anticlockwise and $210^\circ$ clockwise.
E. Firstly for this I divided 360 by 9 which gave me 40. I
then multiplied 40 by 5 which gave me 200. Knowing this I could
work out that to get to 5 I either have to turn the dial
$200^\circ$ anticlockwise or $160^\circ$ clockwise.
We ended the lesson by writing down 3 instructions for someone
else to follow which would give our combination. Sophie, another
girl in our group, wrote down: Using dial D, turn the dial
$240^\circ$ anticlockwise. Then from that point, turn the dial
$210^\circ$ clockwise. Then from this point, turn the dial
$90^\circ$ anticlockwise. What's my combination?
We worked out that it was 8 1 4.
Very well done to you both. You
obviously worked hard on this activity. Thank you too, to Eve and
Rachel from Castle Carrock Primary who also sent in well-explained
solutions.