Jose’s school has 426 students. His principal has promised the Student Council that their idea will be carried out if they can get at least 25% of the student population to sign a petition. So far, 82 students have signed the petition. Jose used the following steps to write an inequality that can be used to determine the number of student signatures still needed: Step 1. Declare the variable: Let x = the number of student signatures still needed. Step 2. Create a ratio equivalent to StartFraction total number of signatures needed over total number of students in the school EndFraction : StartFraction x + 82 over 426 EndFraction. Step 3. Convert 25% to a decimal: 25% = 0.25. Step 4. Write the inequality: StartFraction x + 82 over 426 EndFraction less-than-or-equal-to 0.25. What is Jose’s error? In Step 1, x should be equal to the total number of students in the school. In Step 2, the ratio should be StartFraction x over 426 EndFraction. In Step 3, the decimal should be 0.025. In Step 4, the inequality should be StartFraction x + 82 over 426 EndFraction greater-than-or-equal-to 0.25.

Answer :

Answer:

Step 4

Step-by-step explanation:

Jose's Steps are:

Step 1: Declare the variable:

Let x = the number of student signatures still needed.

Step 2: Create a ratio equivalent to:

[tex]\dfrac{\text{Total number of signatures needed}}{\text{Total number of students in the school}} =\dfrac{x + 82}{426}.[/tex]

Step 3: Convert 25% to a decimal:

25% = 0.25.

Step 4: Write the inequality:

[tex]\dfrac{x + 82}{426}\leq 0.25[/tex]

Since they need at least 25% of the student population to sign a petition, In Step 4, the inequality should be:

[tex]\dfrac{x + 82}{426}\geq 0.25[/tex]

Answer:

(D).Step 4

Step-by-step explanation:

I got it right on edge

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