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Converting minutes to decimal number of hours

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    How many hours are
    in 549 minutes?
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    And we can write it as
    a decimal or a fraction.
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    So essentially, we're
    going to take 549 minutes
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    and divide them
    into groups of 60.
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    Why 60?
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    Because we know that one
    hour is equal to 60 minutes.
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    So it's essentially saying, how
    many groups of 60 minutes can
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    we divide 549 into.
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    Or another way of
    thinking about that
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    is, well, what is 549
    divided into groups of 60.
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    This is how many hours
    we're going to have.
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    So let's do that.
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    Let's take 549 and
    divide it by 60.
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    So let's see, 6 goes
    into 54 9 times.
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    So 60 is going to
    go into 540 9 times.
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    We're going to have a
    little bit left over.
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    So we have 9 times 60 is 540.
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    We subtract.
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    We have 9 left over.
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    And now let's see, we
    have a little left over,
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    so we're going to get a decimal.
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    So let's put a decimal
    place right over here
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    and let's throw
    some 0's over there.
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    Let's bring down a 0.
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    So we bring down a 0.
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    60 goes into 90 1 time.
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    1 times 60 is 60.
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    And we subtract.
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    We get 30.
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    Let's bring down another 0.
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    And so we get to 300.
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    60 goes into 300 5 times.
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    5 times 60, 6 times 6 is
    30, so 5 times 60 is 300.
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    Subtract and we are done.
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    So you divide 549
    into groups of 60.
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    You can divide it into
    9.15 groups of 60 minutes.
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    A group of 60
    minutes is an hour.
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    So this 549 minutes
    is 9.15 hours.
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    I want to make sure that we
    can visualize that properly.
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    So let's actually construct
    what 9.15 hours looks like.
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    So let me draw a little
    line here, and on the top
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    I'll label Hours, and on the
    bottom I'll label Minutes.
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    So this is 0 hours, 0 minutes.
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    And now we have 1 hour,
    which is 60 minutes.
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    Now we have 2 hours,
    which is 120 minutes.
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    Then you have 3 hours,
    which is 180 minutes.
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    Then you have 4 hours,
    which is 240 minutes.
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    5 hours is 300 minutes.
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    6 hours is 360 minutes.
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    7 hours, I might be running out
    of space, is for 420 minutes.
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    Let me copy and paste
    this someplace where
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    I have more real estate.
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    So let me clear that.
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    And then let me
    paste that someplace
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    where I don't run into
    my other math that I did.
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    All right.
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    So then you have 8
    hours is 480 minutes.
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    And then you have 9 hours.
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    Notice, I'm just adding
    60 minutes every time.
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    9 hours is 540 minutes.
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    Or another way you could
    think about it is, well,
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    if each hour is 60,
    9 times 60 is 540.
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    And we don't want
    to go to just 540.
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    We have another 9 left.
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    So then we have to go another
    9 minutes to go to 549.
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    So you have 9 minutes left over.
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    So another way of thinking about
    this, is that 549 is 9 hours.
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    And then you have 9
    minutes left over.
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    And 9 minutes is what
    fraction of an hour?
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    Well, 60 minutes
    is a whole hour.
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    So 9 minutes is 9/60 of an hour.
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    So you could write it this way.
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    It's 9 and 9/60 hours.
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    Or we could write this as
    an equivalent fraction.
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    9/60 is the same
    thing if we divide
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    the numerator and
    the denominator by 3,
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    is the same thing as 3/20.
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    So we could write
    this as 9 and 3/20.
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    And 3/20, well we could figure
    out what that is going to be.
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    Let's see, 20 divided by 3.
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    It's definitely
    going to be smaller
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    than 1, because 3
    is smaller than 20.
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    So let's throw some 0's on here.
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    20 doesn't go into 3, but
    it does go into 30 1 time.
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    1 times 20 is 20.
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    Subtract, we get a 10.
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    Bring down a 0.
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    20 goes into 100 5 times.
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    5 times 20 is 100.
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    And we are done.
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    So notice, 3 over 20 is
    the exact same thing.
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    So 9 and 3/20 is the exact
    same thing as 9 and 15/100.
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    These are all
    equivalent answers.
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Title:
Converting minutes to decimal number of hours
Video Language:
English
Duration:
04:54

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