Making Energy Drinks

Equivalent Ratios
Jerome makes and sells his own energy drinks. He mixes a liquid drink mix with water to create his own special blend.
Jerome usually uses 8 cups of water and 3 cups of drink mix. Tomorrow, there is a road race in town, however, and Jerome thinks he’ll be able to sell a lot more of his energy drinks than usual.
Jerome’s brother told him to add one cup of water for every one cup of drink mix he added to keep the ratio of water to drink mix the same and still increase the total amount of energy drink.
Jerome’s sister told him to multiply both the amount of water and the amount of drink mix by the same number to keep the ratio the same and still increase the total amount of energy drink.
Who is correct: Jerome’s brother or Jerome’s sister?
As you complete the task, keep this question in mind: Based on what you know about ratios, what do you think the answer will be?
Directions:
Complete each task, reading the directions carefully as you do.
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Now let’s get started!
Step 1: Finding the part-to-part and part-to-whole ratios
To make his special energy drink, Jerome uses 8 cups of water and 3 cups of drink mix.
Twenty-two people are running in tomorrow’s road race and Jerome thinks they will each want two cups of energy drink.
How many cups of energy drink does Jerome need to make? (1 point)

1 answer

To determine how many cups of energy drink Jerome needs to make for the road race, we can follow this simple calculation:

  1. There are 22 people running in the race.
  2. Each person wants 2 cups of energy drink.

Now, we calculate the total amount of energy drink needed:

\[ \text{Total Cups Needed} = \text{Number of People} \times \text{Cups per Person} \] \[ \text{Total Cups Needed} = 22 \text{ people} \times 2 \text{ cups/person} = 44 \text{ cups} \]

Therefore, Jerome needs to make 44 cups of energy drink.

Step 1 Answer:

44 cups of energy drink