MathCAMPS Logo

Claude-3 Sonnet on 1.OA.A.2

Common Core Standard 1.OA.A.2

This standard covers the following:

Solve word problems that call for addition of three whole numbers whose sum is less than or equal to 20, e.g., by using objects, drawings, and equations with a symbol for the unknown number to represent the problem.

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: John has 2 tomatoes. He found the same amount of tomatoes in his garden. Later, he picked 7 more from his neighbor's garden. How many tomatoes did John have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of tomatoes John has after picking them from his garden and his neighbor's garden.

Given information:
- John initially has 2 tomatoes.
- He found the same amount of tomatoes in his garden as he initially had.
- He picked 7 more tomatoes from his neighbor's garden.

Step 1: Find the number of tomatoes John found in his garden.
Number of tomatoes John initially had = 2
Number of tomatoes he found in his garden = Same as the initial amount = 2

Step 2: Find the total number of tomatoes John has after picking from his garden.
Total tomatoes after picking from his garden = Initial tomatoes + Tomatoes from his garden
Total tomatoes after picking from his garden = 2 + 2 = 4

Step 3: Find the total number of tomatoes John has after picking from his neighbor's garden.
Total tomatoes after picking from neighbor's garden = Total tomatoes after picking from his garden + Tomatoes from neighbor's garden
Total tomatoes after picking from neighbor's garden = 4 + 7 = 11

Therefore, John now has 11 tomatoes.

### Answer: 11

Expected answer: 11

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Continuing from the previous scenario, what if John initially had 2 tomatoes and again he found the same amount of tomatoes in his garden. But this time, he picked 14 more from his neighbor's garden. How many tomatoes did John have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's continue with the scenario where John initially had 2 tomatoes and found the same amount in his garden, but this time he picked 14 more tomatoes from his neighbor's garden.

Given information:
- John initially had 2 tomatoes.
- He found the same amount of tomatoes in his garden as he initially had, which is 2 tomatoes.
- He picked 14 more tomatoes from his neighbor's garden.

Step 1: Find the number of tomatoes John has after picking from his garden.
Total tomatoes after picking from his garden = Initial tomatoes + Tomatoes from his garden
Total tomatoes after picking from his garden = 2 + 2 = 4

Step 2: Find the total number of tomatoes John has after picking from his neighbor's garden.
Total tomatoes after picking from neighbor's garden = Total tomatoes after picking from his garden + Tomatoes from neighbor's garden
Total tomatoes after picking from neighbor's garden = 4 + 14 = 18

Therefore, with the updated scenario, John now has 18 tomatoes.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a rocket invention trial, scientist Randy is combining 8 kg of Rocket Fuel A and 7 kg of Rocket Fuel B to create a powerful mixture. How much rocket fuel is there in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total mass of the two rocket fuels combined.

Given information:
- Mass of Rocket Fuel A = 8 kg
- Mass of Rocket Fuel B = 7 kg

To find the total mass, we need to add the masses of Rocket Fuel A and Rocket Fuel B.

Total mass = Mass of Rocket Fuel A + Mass of Rocket Fuel B
Total mass = 8 kg + 7 kg
Total mass = 15 kg

Therefore, the total amount of rocket fuel is 15 kg.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the initial rocket fuel mixture, Randy's assistant, Julia, adds an extra 5 kg of Rocket Fuel C into the mixture. How much rocket fuel is there in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total mass of the rocket fuel mixture after adding Rocket Fuel C.

Given information:
- Initial total mass of the rocket fuel mixture = 15 kg (from the previous problem)
- Mass of Rocket Fuel C added = 5 kg

To find the new total mass, we need to add the mass of Rocket Fuel C to the initial total mass.

New total mass = Initial total mass + Mass of Rocket Fuel C
New total mass = 15 kg + 5 kg
New total mass = 20 kg

Therefore, after adding Rocket Fuel C, the total amount of rocket fuel in the mixture is 20 kg.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: If initially Randy combined 7 kg of Rocket Fuel A with 7 kg of Rocket Fuel B instead of using 8 kg of Rocket Fuel A, how much rocket fuel would there be in total before adding Rocket Fuel C?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* Initially, Randy combined 7 kg of Rocket Fuel A and 7 kg of Rocket Fuel B
* We need to find the total amount of rocket fuel before adding Rocket Fuel C

To find the total, we add the masses of Rocket Fuel A and Rocket Fuel B:
* Mass of Rocket Fuel A = 7 kg
* Mass of Rocket Fuel B = 7 kg
* Total mass = Mass of Rocket Fuel A + Mass of Rocket Fuel B
* Total mass = 7 kg + 7 kg
* Total mass = 14 kg

Therefore, before adding Rocket Fuel C, the total amount of rocket fuel would be 14 kg.

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: James has 7 chairs in his living room. He decided to add 11 more chairs for a family gathering. How many chairs does James have in total in his living room now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of chairs James has in his living room after adding the new chairs.

Given information:
- James initially had 7 chairs in his living room.
- He added 11 more chairs for a family gathering.

To find the total number of chairs, we need to add the initial number of chairs and the number of chairs added.

Total number of chairs = Initial number of chairs + Number of chairs added
Total number of chairs = 7 + 11
Total number of chairs = 18

Therefore, James has a total of 18 chairs in his living room now.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the family gathering, James decided to add an extra chair to the living room, making it a special spot for him to sit and read. How many chairs are there in James's living room now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this problem, we need to find the total number of chairs in James's living room after adding one more chair.

Given:
- Initially, James had 7 chairs in his living room.
- He added 11 more chairs for the family gathering, making the total 18 chairs.
- After the family gathering, James decided to add one more chair as a special spot for him to sit and read.

To calculate the new total number of chairs, we need to add the one extra chair to the previous total.

Previous total number of chairs = 18
Number of chairs added = 1

New total number of chairs = Previous total number of chairs + Number of chairs added
New total number of chairs = 18 + 1
New total number of chairs = 19

Therefore, there are now 19 chairs in James's living room.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: At a campfire, Dana roasts 4 marshmallows. At the same time, Matt roasts 4 marshmallows as well. How many marshmallows did they roast together?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of marshmallows roasted by Dana and Matt.

Given information:
- Dana roasted 4 marshmallows.
- Matt roasted 4 marshmallows.

To find the total number of marshmallows roasted, we need to add the number of marshmallows roasted by Dana and Matt.

Total number of marshmallows roasted = Number of marshmallows roasted by Dana + Number of marshmallows roasted by Matt
Total number of marshmallows roasted = 4 + 4
Total number of marshmallows roasted = 8

Therefore, Dana and Matt roasted a total of 8 marshmallows together.

### Answer: 8

Expected answer: 8

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After Dana and Matt finish roasting their marshmallows, they decide to roast 3 more. How many marshmallows have been roasted in total at the campfire?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of marshmallows roasted at the campfire, including the initial marshmallows roasted by Dana and Matt, and the additional 3 marshmallows they roasted later.

Given information:
- Dana and Matt initially roasted 8 marshmallows together (4 each).
- They later roasted 3 more marshmallows.

To find the total number of marshmallows roasted, we need to add the initial number of marshmallows roasted and the additional marshmallows roasted.

Total number of marshmallows roasted = Initial number of marshmallows roasted + Additional marshmallows roasted
Total number of marshmallows roasted = 8 + 3
Total number of marshmallows roasted = 11

Therefore, a total of 11 marshmallows have been roasted at the campfire.

### Answer: 11

Expected answer: 11

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose Dana originally roasted 6 marshmallows instead of 4. If Matt still roasted 4 marshmallows, how many marshmallows did they roast together at the campfire now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this problem, we need to find the total number of marshmallows roasted by Dana and Matt together.

Given information:
- Dana roasted 6 marshmallows.
- Matt roasted 4 marshmallows.

To find the total number of marshmallows roasted, we need to add the number of marshmallows roasted by Dana and Matt.

Total number of marshmallows roasted = Number of marshmallows roasted by Dana + Number of marshmallows roasted by Matt
Total number of marshmallows roasted = 6 + 4
Total number of marshmallows roasted = 10

Therefore, Dana and Matt roasted a total of 10 marshmallows together at the campfire.

### Answer: 10

Expected answer: 10

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In the morning, Chris built a tower with 4 building blocks. In the afternoon, he added 3 more blocks to the tower. How many building blocks are in Chris's tower now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of building blocks in Chris's tower after adding the new blocks in the afternoon.

Given information:
- In the morning, Chris built a tower with 4 building blocks.
- In the afternoon, he added 3 more blocks to the tower.

Step 1: Find the number of building blocks in the tower in the morning.
Number of building blocks in the morning = 4

Step 2: Find the number of building blocks added in the afternoon.
Number of building blocks added in the afternoon = 3

Step 3: Find the total number of building blocks in the tower now.
Total number of building blocks = Number of building blocks in the morning + Number of building blocks added in the afternoon
Total number of building blocks = 4 + 3
Total number of building blocks = 7

Therefore, Chris's tower now has 7 building blocks.

### Answer: 7

Expected answer: 7

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After building a tower with 4 blocks in the morning and adding 3 more in the afternoon, Chris finds 6 more blocks after school. If he adds these to his tower, how many building blocks are in Chris's tower now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of building blocks in Chris's tower after adding the new blocks he found after school.

Given information:
- In the morning, Chris built a tower with 4 building blocks.
- In the afternoon, he added 3 more blocks to the tower.
- After school, he found 6 more blocks.

Step 1: Find the number of building blocks in the tower after adding the blocks in the afternoon.
Number of building blocks after adding blocks in the afternoon = 4 + 3 = 7

Step 2: Find the number of building blocks added after school.
Number of building blocks added after school = 6

Step 3: Find the total number of building blocks in the tower now.
Total number of building blocks = Number of building blocks after adding blocks in the afternoon + Number of building blocks added after school
Total number of building blocks = 7 + 6
Total number of building blocks = 13

Therefore, after adding the 6 blocks he found after school, Chris's tower now has 13 building blocks.

### Answer: 13

Expected answer: 13

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's revise our previous scenario: Chris initially built a tower with 4 building blocks. However, imagine he added 14 more blocks in the afternoon instead of 3. How many building blocks would be in Chris’s tower then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's revise the scenario with the new information.

Given information:
- In the morning, Chris built a tower with 4 building blocks.
- In the afternoon, he added 14 more blocks to the tower.

Step 1: Find the number of building blocks in the tower in the morning.
Number of building blocks in the morning = 4

Step 2: Find the number of building blocks added in the afternoon.
Number of building blocks added in the afternoon = 14

Step 3: Find the total number of building blocks in the tower now.
Total number of building blocks = Number of building blocks in the morning + Number of building blocks added in the afternoon
Total number of building blocks = 4 + 14
Total number of building blocks = 18

Therefore, if Chris added 14 more blocks in the afternoon, his tower would have 18 building blocks.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Bill found 11 balloons at the park. Later, during a birthday party, he found 3 more balloons. How many balloons did Bill find in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of balloons Bill found at the park and the number of balloons he found during the birthday party.

Given information:
- Bill found 11 balloons at the park.
- Bill found 3 more balloons during a birthday party.

Step 1: Add the number of balloons found at the park and the number of balloons found during the birthday party.
Number of balloons found at the park + Number of balloons found during the birthday party = Total number of balloons found
11 + 3 = 14

Therefore, Bill found a total of 14 balloons.

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's imagine instead that Bill found 4 balloons at the park, rather than 11. He still found 3 balloons at the birthday party. How many balloons did Bill find in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's update the given information:

- Bill found 4 balloons at the park.
- Bill found 3 more balloons during a birthday party.

To find the total number of balloons Bill found, we need to add the number of balloons found at the park and the number of balloons found during the birthday party.

Step 1: Add the number of balloons found at the park and the number of balloons found during the birthday party.
Number of balloons found at the park + Number of balloons found during the birthday party = Total number of balloons found
4 + 3 = 7

Therefore, with the updated information, Bill found a total of 7 balloons.

### Answer: 7

Expected answer: 7

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Officer Johnson is on night patrol and has already checked on 10 locations. Over the next hour, he is supposed to check 9 more locations. How many locations is Officer Johnson supposed to check in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of locations Officer Johnson is supposed to check by adding the number of locations he has already checked and the number of locations he is supposed to check in the next hour.

Given information:
- Officer Johnson has already checked on 10 locations.
- Over the next hour, he is supposed to check 9 more locations.

Step 1: Find the total number of locations Officer Johnson is supposed to check.
Total locations = Locations already checked + Locations to be checked in the next hour
Total locations = 10 + 9
Total locations = 19

Therefore, Officer Johnson is supposed to check a total of 19 locations.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After Officer Johnson checks the initial total locations, he is informed that there's an additional location he needs to patrol. How many locations does Officer Johnson check in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's think through this step-by-step:
* Initially, Officer Johnson was supposed to check a total of 19 locations (10 already checked + 9 more to check)
* Now, he is informed that there is an additional location he needs to patrol
* To find the new total, we take the initial total and add 1 for the additional location:
    * New total = Initial total + 1
    * New total = 19 + 1
    * New total = 20

Therefore, with the additional location, Officer Johnson now needs to check a total of 20 locations.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: If instead of the initially mentioned 10 locations, Officer Johnson was initially supposed to check only 1 location and then 9 more locations over the next hour, how many locations would Officer Johnson be supposed to check in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's revisit the problem with the new information.

Given information:
- Officer Johnson was initially supposed to check 1 location.
- Over the next hour, he is supposed to check 9 more locations.

To find the total number of locations Officer Johnson is supposed to check, we need to add the initial number of locations and the number of locations to be checked in the next hour.

Step 1: Find the total number of locations Officer Johnson is supposed to check.
Total locations = Initial number of locations + Locations to be checked in the next hour
Total locations = 1 + 9
Total locations = 10

Therefore, with the new information, Officer Johnson is supposed to check a total of 10 locations.

### Answer: 10

Expected answer: 10

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In an orienteering event, Emily sets out towards the first landmark that is 3 km away. After reaching the landmark, she heads for the second landmark which is 17 km away from the first. What is the total distance Emily planned to cover between the two landmarks?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total distance Emily planned to cover between the two landmarks.

Given information:
- The distance from the starting point to the first landmark is 3 km.
- The distance from the first landmark to the second landmark is 17 km.

To find the total distance, we need to add the distance from the starting point to the first landmark and the distance from the first landmark to the second landmark.

Total distance = Distance from starting point to first landmark + Distance from first landmark to second landmark
Total distance = 3 km + 17 km
Total distance = 20 km

Therefore, Emily planned to cover a total distance of 20 km between the two landmarks.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: James has 8 dollars in his wallet. He finds 3 dollars on the ground and adds it to his wallet. How much money does he have now in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the amount of money James initially had in his wallet to the amount of money he found on the ground.

Given information:
- James has $8 in his wallet.
- James finds $3 on the ground and adds it to his wallet.

Step 1: Find the total amount of money James has after adding the $3 he found.
Amount of money in his wallet + Amount of money found on the ground = Total amount of money
$8 + $3 = $11

Therefore, James now has a total of $11 in his wallet.

### Answer: 11

Expected answer: 11

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After having a total of $11 in his wallet, James later receives $8 from his friend as a repayment of an old loan. How much money does James have in his wallet now in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the amount of money James already had in his wallet to the amount of money he received from his friend.

Given information:
- James had $11 in his wallet.
- James received $8 from his friend as a repayment of an old loan.

Step 1: Find the total amount of money James has after receiving the $8 from his friend.
Amount of money in his wallet + Amount of money received from his friend = Total amount of money
$11 + $8 = $19

Therefore, James now has a total of $19 in his wallet.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Dr. Smith treated 5 patients in the morning. In the afternoon, Dr. Smith treated 12 more patients. How many patients did Dr. Smith treat for the day?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of patients Dr. Smith treated by adding the number of patients treated in the morning and the afternoon.

Given information:
- Dr. Smith treated 5 patients in the morning.
- Dr. Smith treated 12 more patients in the afternoon.

Step 1: Find the total number of patients treated by adding the number of patients treated in the morning and the afternoon.
Total number of patients treated = Number of patients treated in the morning + Number of patients treated in the afternoon
Total number of patients treated = 5 + 12
Total number of patients treated = 17

Therefore, Dr. Smith treated a total of 17 patients for the day.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After a long day, Dr. Smith was called in to treat 3 more patients in the evening. How many patients did Dr. Smith treat in total for the day?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's take the previous information and add the new information about the evening patients.

Given information:
- Dr. Smith treated 5 patients in the morning.
- Dr. Smith treated 12 patients in the afternoon.
- Dr. Smith treated 3 more patients in the evening.

Step 1: Find the total number of patients treated in the morning and afternoon.
Total number of patients treated in the morning and afternoon = 5 + 12 = 17

Step 2: Add the number of patients treated in the evening to the total from Step 1.
Total number of patients treated for the day = Total number of patients treated in the morning and afternoon + Number of patients treated in the evening
Total number of patients treated for the day = 17 + 3 = 20

Therefore, Dr. Smith treated a total of 20 patients for the day.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a fairy-themed math adventure, Miny the fairy starts with 1 magical stone. She then attends a fairy party where she receives 11 additional magical stones, represented by a new variable, b. After the party, she collects 2 more stones on her way home. How many magical stones does Miny have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to follow the given information and perform the necessary calculations.

Given:
- Miny starts with 1 magical stone.
- At the fairy party, she receives 11 additional magical stones, represented by the variable b.
- After the party, she collects 2 more stones on her way home.

Step 1: Calculate the number of stones Miny has after the fairy party.
Number of stones after the party = Initial number of stones + Stones received at the party
Number of stones after the party = 1 + b
Number of stones after the party = 1 + 11 = 12

Step 2: Calculate the total number of stones Miny has after collecting 2 more stones on her way home.
Total number of stones = Number of stones after the party + Stones collected on the way home
Total number of stones = 12 + 2 = 14

Therefore, Miny now has 14 magical stones.

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After arriving home from her fairy party, Miny the fairy finds that she has received 2 more magical stones in the mail. How many magical stones does Miny have now, considering the ones she received in the mail?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to consider the number of magical stones Miny had after the fairy party and the additional stones she received in the mail.

Given:
- After the fairy party and collecting stones on her way home, Miny had 14 magical stones.
- Miny received 2 more magical stones in the mail.

Step 1: Calculate the total number of stones Miny has after receiving the stones in the mail.
Total number of stones = Number of stones after the party and collecting on the way home + Stones received in the mail
Total number of stones = 14 + 2 = 16

Therefore, after receiving the 2 magical stones in the mail, Miny now has 16 magical stones.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In a reimagined scenario, Miny the fairy starts with 1 magical stone. Rather than receiving 11 additional stones at the fairy party, she actually receives 10. After the party, she still collects the same 2 more stones on her way home. How many magical stones does Miny have now in this new situation?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this reimagined scenario, we need to update the information and recalculate the total number of magical stones Miny has.

Given:
- Miny starts with 1 magical stone.
- At the fairy party, she receives 10 additional magical stones (instead of 11).
- After the party, she collects 2 more stones on her way home.

Step 1: Calculate the number of stones Miny has after the fairy party.
Number of stones after the party = Initial number of stones + Stones received at the party
Number of stones after the party = 1 + 10 = 11

Step 2: Calculate the total number of stones Miny has after collecting 2 more stones on her way home.
Total number of stones = Number of stones after the party + Stones collected on the way home
Total number of stones = 11 + 2 = 13

Therefore, in this new situation, Miny now has 13 magical stones.

### Answer: 13

Expected answer: 13

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Once upon a time, a king owned 17 castles across his kingdom. He went on an expedition and discovered a beautiful land, where he decided to build one more. How many castles does the king own now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of castles the king owns after building the new one.

Given information:
- The king initially owned 17 castles across his kingdom.
- The king decided to build one more castle in the beautiful land he discovered.

To find the total number of castles, we need to add the number of new castles to the initial number of castles.

Total number of castles = Initial number of castles + Number of new castles
Total number of castles = 17 + 1
Total number of castles = 18

Therefore, after building the new castle, the king now owns 18 castles.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: There are 10 fluffy clouds in the sky in the morning. In the afternoon, 4 more clouds join them. How many clouds are in the sky now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of clouds in the morning to the number of clouds that joined them in the afternoon.

Given information:
- There are 10 fluffy clouds in the sky in the morning.
- In the afternoon, 4 more clouds join them.

Number of clouds in the morning = 10
Number of clouds that joined in the afternoon = 4

Total number of clouds in the sky now = Number of clouds in the morning + Number of clouds that joined in the afternoon
Total number of clouds in the sky now = 10 + 4
Total number of clouds in the sky now = 14

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: There are 10 fluffy clouds in the sky in the morning. In the afternoon, 4 more clouds join them, and in the evening, 1 more cloud joins the group. How many clouds are in the sky now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of clouds in the morning, the number of clouds that joined them in the afternoon, and the number of clouds that joined them in the evening.

Given information:
- There are 10 fluffy clouds in the sky in the morning.
- In the afternoon, 4 more clouds join them.
- In the evening, 1 more cloud joins the group.

Number of clouds in the morning = 10
Number of clouds that joined in the afternoon = 4
Number of clouds that joined in the evening = 1

Total number of clouds in the sky now = Number of clouds in the morning + Number of clouds that joined in the afternoon + Number of clouds that joined in the evening
Total number of clouds in the sky now = 10 + 4 + 1
Total number of clouds in the sky now = 15

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Remember the last problem where there were 10 fluffy clouds in the sky in the morning. But what if instead there had been 10 fluffy clouds which were then joined by 6 more clouds in the afternoon. How many clouds would be in the sky now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- There were 10 fluffy clouds in the sky in the morning.
- In the afternoon, 6 more clouds joined them.

Number of clouds in the morning = 10
Number of clouds that joined in the afternoon = 6

Total number of clouds in the sky now = Number of clouds in the morning + Number of clouds that joined in the afternoon
Total number of clouds in the sky now = 10 + 6
Total number of clouds in the sky now = 16

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: John eats 3 apples. He then eats 5 more apples. Later in the day he eats 5 grapes. How many pieces of fruit did John eat in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add up the number of apples and grapes John ate.

Given information:
- John ate 3 apples initially.
- John then ate 5 more apples.
- Later in the day, John ate 5 grapes.

Step 1: Find the total number of apples John ate.
Number of apples eaten initially + Number of apples eaten later = Total number of apples eaten
3 apples + 5 apples = 8 apples

Step 2: Find the total number of fruits John ate.
Total number of apples eaten + Number of grapes eaten = Total number of fruits eaten
8 apples + 5 grapes = 13 fruits

Therefore, John ate a total of 13 pieces of fruit.

### Answer: 13

Expected answer: 13

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a dinosaur-themed park, there are 10 T-Rex exhibits and 1 Brachiosaurus exhibit. How many dinosaur exhibits are there in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of dinosaur exhibits by adding the number of T-Rex exhibits and the number of Brachiosaurus exhibits.

Given information:
- There are 10 T-Rex exhibits.
- There is 1 Brachiosaurus exhibit.

Total number of dinosaur exhibits = Number of T-Rex exhibits + Number of Brachiosaurus exhibits
Total number of dinosaur exhibits = 10 + 1
Total number of dinosaur exhibits = 11

### Answer: 11

Expected answer: 11

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In addition to the T-Rex and Brachiosaurus exhibits, the park decides to add 7 more Pterodactyl exhibits. How many dinosaur exhibits will the park have then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of dinosaur exhibits after adding the new Pterodactyl exhibits.

Given information:
- Initially, there were 10 T-Rex exhibits and 1 Brachiosaurus exhibit, making a total of 11 dinosaur exhibits.
- The park decides to add 7 more Pterodactyl exhibits.

Total number of dinosaur exhibits after adding Pterodactyl exhibits = Initial number of dinosaur exhibits + Number of new Pterodactyl exhibits
Total number of dinosaur exhibits after adding Pterodactyl exhibits = 11 + 7
Total number of dinosaur exhibits after adding Pterodactyl exhibits = 18

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose initially the park only had 1 T-Rex exhibit instead of 10, but still had 1 Brachiosaurus exhibit. In that case, how many dinosaur exhibits would there have been before the Pterodactyl exhibits were added?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's consider the new information:
* Initially, there was 1 T-Rex exhibit
* There was 1 Brachiosaurus exhibit

To find the total number of dinosaur exhibits before the Pterodactyl exhibits were added, we need to add the number of T-Rex exhibits and the number of Brachiosaurus exhibits.

Total number of dinosaur exhibits before Pterodactyl exhibits were added
= Number of T-Rex exhibits + Number of Brachiosaurus exhibits
= 1 + 1
= 2

### Answer: 2

Expected answer: 2

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Derek has 10 toy cars at home, then he goes to the store and buys 6 more. How many toy cars does Derek have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of toy cars Derek has after buying 6 more from the store.

Given information:
- Derek initially has 10 toy cars at home.
- Derek buys 6 more toy cars from the store.

To find the total number of toy cars, we need to add the number of toy cars he had initially and the number of toy cars he bought from the store.

Total number of toy cars = Initial number of toy cars + Number of toy cars bought from the store
Total number of toy cars = 10 + 6
Total number of toy cars = 16

Therefore, Derek has a total of 16 toy cars after buying 6 more from the store.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Derek's cousin, Jake, comes over and brings 1 more toy car to play with. How many toy cars are there altogether now for Derek and Jake to play with?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of toy cars after Jake brings 1 more toy car to play with.

Given information:
- Derek initially had 10 toy cars at home.
- Derek bought 6 more toy cars from the store.
- Jake brings 1 more toy car to play with.

Step 1: Find the total number of toy cars Derek has after buying from the store.
Total number of toy cars Derek has = Initial number of toy cars + Number of toy cars bought from the store
Total number of toy cars Derek has = 10 + 6 = 16

Step 2: Find the total number of toy cars after Jake brings 1 more toy car.
Total number of toy cars = Total number of toy cars Derek has + Number of toy cars Jake brings
Total number of toy cars = 16 + 1 = 17

Therefore, there are a total of 17 toy cars for Derek and Jake to play with after Jake brings 1 more toy car.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if Derek originally had 8 toy cars at home instead of 10 before he bought 6 more from the store? How many toy cars would Derek have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the new information.

Given information:
- Derek initially has 8 toy cars at home.
- Derek buys 6 more toy cars from the store.

To find the total number of toy cars, we need to add the number of toy cars he had initially and the number of toy cars he bought from the store.

Total number of toy cars = Initial number of toy cars + Number of toy cars bought from the store
Total number of toy cars = 8 + 6
Total number of toy cars = 14

Therefore, if Derek originally had 8 toy cars at home before buying 6 more from the store, he would have a total of 14 toy cars.

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: John has 6 logs in the fireplace. He adds 6 more to keep the fire going. How many logs are in the fireplace now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of logs in the fireplace after adding the new logs.

Given information:
- John initially had 6 logs in the fireplace.
- He added 6 more logs to keep the fire going.

To find the total number of logs, we need to add the initial number of logs and the number of logs added.

Total number of logs = Initial number of logs + Number of logs added
Total number of logs = 6 + 6
Total number of logs = 12

Therefore, there are now 12 logs in the fireplace.

### Answer: 12

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: John added 4 more logs to the fireplace after some time. Now, how many logs are in the fireplace?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's continue from the previous information.

Given:
- Initially, there were 6 logs in the fireplace.
- John added 6 more logs, making it 12 logs in the fireplace.
- After some time, John added 4 more logs.

To find the total number of logs now, we need to add the 4 new logs to the previous total of 12 logs.

Total number of logs = Previous total + Number of logs added
Total number of logs = 12 + 4
Total number of logs = 16

Therefore, after adding 4 more logs, there are now 16 logs in the fireplace.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's reconsider the situation, but this time, John had originally 7 logs in the fireplace instead of 6, and he still added 6 more to keep the fire going. Now, how many logs are in the fireplace?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's reconsider the problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- John initially had 7 logs in the fireplace.
- He added 6 more logs to keep the fire going.

To find the total number of logs, we need to add the initial number of logs and the number of logs added.

Total number of logs = Initial number of logs + Number of logs added
Total number of logs = 7 + 6
Total number of logs = 13

Therefore, with the updated information, there are now 13 logs in the fireplace.

### Answer: 13

Expected answer: 13

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Caitlin bought 7 cartons of milk, and then she went shopping again and bought an additional 11 cartons. How many cartons of milk did Caitlin buy in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of cartons Caitlin bought in the first trip and the second trip.

Given information:
- Caitlin bought 7 cartons of milk in the first trip.
- Caitlin bought an additional 11 cartons of milk in the second trip.

Step 1: Find the total number of cartons of milk Caitlin bought.
Total cartons of milk = Cartons bought in the first trip + Cartons bought in the second trip
Total cartons of milk = 7 + 11
Total cartons of milk = 18

Therefore, Caitlin bought a total of 18 cartons of milk.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's say Caitlin changed her mind and she initially bought only 4 cartons of milk instead of 7. She still went shopping a second time and bought the same additional 11 cartons. Now, how many cartons of milk did Caitlin buy in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's update the information:

Given information:
- Caitlin bought 4 cartons of milk in the first trip.
- Caitlin bought an additional 11 cartons of milk in the second trip.

Step 1: Find the total number of cartons of milk Caitlin bought.
Total cartons of milk = Cartons bought in the first trip + Cartons bought in the second trip
Total cartons of milk = 4 + 11
Total cartons of milk = 15

Therefore, with the updated information, Caitlin bought a total of 15 cartons of milk.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Sebastian blew 2 bubbles and his sister, Maya, blew 17 more bubbles. How many bubbles did they blow in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the sum of the bubbles blown by Sebastian and Maya.

Given information:
- Sebastian blew 2 bubbles.
- Maya blew 17 more bubbles than Sebastian.

Step 1: Find the number of bubbles blown by Maya.
Maya's bubbles = Sebastian's bubbles + 17
Maya's bubbles = 2 + 17 = 19 bubbles

Step 2: Find the total number of bubbles blown by Sebastian and Maya.
Total bubbles = Sebastian's bubbles + Maya's bubbles
Total bubbles = 2 + 19 = 21 bubbles

Therefore, Sebastian and Maya blew a total of 21 bubbles.

### Answer: 21

Expected answer: 19

Correct? No

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Juliet had 1 guitar at home. Later she went to a music fest and bought 12 more guitars. How many guitars does Juliet have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of guitars Juliet has after buying 12 more guitars at the music fest.

Given information:
- Juliet initially had 1 guitar at home.
- Juliet bought 12 more guitars at the music fest.

Step 1: Find the number of guitars Juliet had after buying the new guitars.
Number of guitars after buying new guitars = Initial number of guitars + Number of guitars bought
Number of guitars after buying new guitars = 1 + 12
Number of guitars after buying new guitars = 13

Therefore, Juliet now has 13 guitars.

### Answer: 13

Expected answer: 13

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the music fest, Juliet's friend gifted her 2 more guitars. Now, how many guitars does Juliet have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's update the information:

Given:
- Initially, Juliet had 1 guitar at home.
- At the music fest, she bought 12 more guitars.
- After the music fest, her friend gifted her 2 more guitars.

To find the total number of guitars Juliet has now, we need to add the number of guitars she had after the music fest and the number of guitars gifted by her friend.

Step 1: Find the number of guitars Juliet had after the music fest.
Number of guitars after the music fest = Initial number of guitars + Number of guitars bought
Number of guitars after the music fest = 1 + 12 = 13

Step 2: Find the total number of guitars Juliet has now by adding the number of guitars gifted by her friend.
Total number of guitars = Number of guitars after the music fest + Number of guitars gifted
Total number of guitars = 13 + 2 = 15

Therefore, Juliet now has a total of 15 guitars.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if Juliet originally had 1 guitar at home and instead of buying 12 at the music fest, she bought 14 more guitars? How many guitars does Juliet have in this scenario?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this scenario, the given information is:
- Juliet originally had 1 guitar at home.
- Juliet bought 14 more guitars at the music fest.

To find the total number of guitars Juliet has now, we need to add the number of guitars she originally had to the number of guitars she bought.

Step 1: Find the total number of guitars Juliet has now.
Total number of guitars = Number of guitars originally + Number of guitars bought
Total number of guitars = 1 + 14
Total number of guitars = 15

Therefore, if Juliet originally had 1 guitar at home and bought 14 more guitars at the music fest, she now has 15 guitars.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a neighborhood, there are 16 dogs living in different houses. One of the houses has 3 dogs. How many dogs are there in the neighborhood in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of dogs in the neighborhood.

Given information:
- There are 16 dogs living in different houses in the neighborhood.
- One of the houses has 3 dogs.

Since we know that there are 16 dogs in total, and one house has 3 dogs, we can subtract 3 from 16 to find the number of dogs in the remaining houses.

Number of dogs in the remaining houses = Total dogs - Dogs in the house with 3 dogs
Number of dogs in the remaining houses = 16 - 3 = 13

Now, we can add the dogs in the house with 3 dogs to the dogs in the remaining houses to find the total number of dogs in the neighborhood.

Total dogs in the neighborhood = Dogs in the remaining houses + Dogs in the house with 3 dogs
Total dogs in the neighborhood = 13 + 3 = 16

Therefore, there are 16 dogs in the neighborhood in total.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 19

Correct? No

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A rainbow in the sky is spotted by 6 people in town A and 13 people in town B. How many people spotted the rainbow in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of people who spotted the rainbow in both towns.

Given information:
- 6 people spotted the rainbow in town A.
- 13 people spotted the rainbow in town B.

To find the total number of people who spotted the rainbow, we need to add the number of people from both towns.

Total number of people who spotted the rainbow = Number of people in town A + Number of people in town B
Total number of people who spotted the rainbow = 6 + 13
Total number of people who spotted the rainbow = 19

Therefore, 19 people spotted the rainbow in total.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Sam has 6 bottles of water. His friend, Quinn, gives him 11 more. How many bottles of water does Sam have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of bottles of water Sam has after receiving 11 more bottles from his friend Quinn.

Given information:
- Sam initially has 6 bottles of water.
- Quinn gives Sam 11 more bottles of water.

Step 1: Find the total number of bottles of water Sam has after receiving the additional bottles from Quinn.
Sam's initial number of bottles + Number of bottles received from Quinn = Total number of bottles
6 + 11 = 17

Therefore, Sam now has 17 bottles of water.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After Sam counts his bottles, his girlfriend gives him one more. Now, how many bottles of water does Sam have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:

Given:
- Initially, Sam had 6 bottles of water.
- Quinn gave Sam 11 more bottles of water.
- So, after receiving bottles from Quinn, Sam had 6 + 11 = 17 bottles of water.
- Now, Sam's girlfriend gives him 1 more bottle of water.

To find the total number of bottles Sam has now, we need to add the 1 bottle from his girlfriend to the 17 bottles he already had.

Total number of bottles = Number of bottles Sam had after receiving from Quinn + Number of bottles received from his girlfriend
Total number of bottles = 17 + 1
Total number of bottles = 18

Therefore, after receiving 1 more bottle from his girlfriend, Sam now has a total of 18 bottles of water.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: If Sam initially had 9 bottles instead of 6, and Quinn still gave him 11 more, how many bottles of water would Sam have then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- Sam initially has 9 bottles of water.
- Quinn gives Sam 11 more bottles of water.

Step 1: Find the total number of bottles of water Sam has after receiving the additional bottles from Quinn.
Sam's initial number of bottles + Number of bottles received from Quinn = Total number of bottles
9 + 11 = 20

Therefore, if Sam initially had 9 bottles of water and Quinn gave him 11 more bottles, Sam would have 20 bottles of water in total.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a shark infested region, a researcher observes 9 sharks during the morning expedition and 11 more sharks during the afternoon expedition. How many sharks did the researcher observe during the whole day?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of sharks observed by the researcher during the whole day.

Given information:
- The researcher observed 9 sharks during the morning expedition.
- The researcher observed 11 more sharks during the afternoon expedition.

To find the total number of sharks observed, we need to add the number of sharks observed in the morning and afternoon expeditions.

Total number of sharks observed = Number of sharks observed in the morning + Number of sharks observed in the afternoon
Total number of sharks observed = 9 + 11
Total number of sharks observed = 20

Therefore, the researcher observed a total of 20 sharks during the whole day.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the shark infested region, the researcher returns the next day and observes a different number of sharks. This time, he sees 9 sharks during the morning expedition and 2 more during the afternoon expedition. How many sharks did the researcher observe on the second day?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of sharks observed by the researcher on the second day.

Given information:
- The researcher observed 9 sharks during the morning expedition.
- The researcher observed 2 more sharks during the afternoon expedition.

To find the total number of sharks observed, we need to add the number of sharks observed in the morning and afternoon expeditions.

Total number of sharks observed = Number of sharks observed in the morning + Number of sharks observed in the afternoon
Total number of sharks observed = 9 + 2
Total number of sharks observed = 11

Therefore, the researcher observed a total of 11 sharks on the second day.

### Answer: 11

Expected answer: 11

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A princess has 2 magical stones. The wizard doubles the amount of her stones. After that, she finds 11 more magical stones. How many magical stones does princess have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to follow these steps:

1. Find the initial number of stones the princess had.
   Initial number of stones = 2

2. Find the number of stones after the wizard doubled them.
   Number of stones after doubling = 2 Γ— 2 = 4

3. Find the number of stones after the princess found 11 more stones.
   Number of stones after finding 11 more = 4 + 11 = 15

Therefore, the princess now has 15 magical stones.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the princess finds the 11 stones, a fairy presents her with 3 more magical stones. Now, how many magical stones does the princess have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's continue from where we left off.

Previously, we found that after finding 11 more stones, the princess had:
Number of stones = 4 (after doubling) + 11 (found stones) = 15

Now, the fairy presents her with 3 more magical stones.

So, we need to add 3 to the previous total:
Number of stones after the fairy's gift = 15 + 3 = 18

Therefore, the total number of magical stones the princess has now is 18.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After a further recollection, the princess realizes that instead of finding 11 magical stones originally, she had actually found 15. How many magical stones does she now have if we consider this new information?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the new information:

1. The princess initially had 2 magical stones.
2. The wizard doubled the amount, so she had 2 x 2 = 4 stones.
3. Instead of finding 11 more stones, she actually found 15 more stones.
4. So the total number of stones now is:
   Number of stones after the wizard doubled them + Number of stones found
   = 4 + 15
   = 19

Therefore, with the new information that she found 15 stones instead of 11, the princess now has 19 magical stones.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A zoo has 8 giraffes in one area and 7 giraffes in another area. How many giraffes are there in the zoo in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of giraffes in the two areas.

Given information:
- There are 8 giraffes in one area.
- There are 7 giraffes in another area.

Step 1: Add the number of giraffes in the two areas.
Number of giraffes in the first area + Number of giraffes in the second area = Total number of giraffes in the zoo
8 + 7 = 15

Therefore, there are 15 giraffes in the zoo in total.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: The zoo decides to bring in 3 more giraffes. How many giraffes are there in the zoo in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* Originally, there were 15 giraffes in the zoo
* The zoo brought in 3 more giraffes

To find the new total, we add the original number of giraffes to the number of new giraffes:

Original number of giraffes + Number of new giraffes = New total number of giraffes
15 + 3 = 18

Therefore, after bringing in 3 more giraffes, there are now 18 giraffes in the zoo in total.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose originally, the zoo had 5 giraffes in one area instead of 8 and still had 7 giraffes in the other area. How many giraffes would there be in the zoo in total then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- There are 5 giraffes in one area.
- There are 7 giraffes in another area.

To find the total number of giraffes in the zoo, we need to add the number of giraffes in the two areas.

Step 1: Add the number of giraffes in the two areas.
Number of giraffes in the first area + Number of giraffes in the second area = Total number of giraffes in the zoo
5 + 7 = 12

Therefore, if the zoo originally had 5 giraffes in one area and 7 giraffes in the other area, there would be a total of 12 giraffes in the zoo.

### Answer: 12

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Peter has $1. He finds $2 on the street. How many dollars in total does Peter have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the amount of money Peter initially had with the amount he found on the street.

Given information:
- Peter initially had $1.
- Peter found $2 on the street.

Step 1: Add the initial amount of money Peter had with the amount he found on the street.
Initial amount + Amount found = Total amount
$1 + $2 = $3

Therefore, Peter has a total of $3 now.

### Answer: 3

Expected answer: 3

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After finding $2 on the street, Peter goes home to continue his summer job of dog-walking. That day he earns $12. How many dollars in total does Peter have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total amount of money Peter has after earning from his dog-walking job.

Given information:
- Peter initially had $1.
- Peter found $2 on the street.
- Peter earned $12 from his dog-walking job.

Step 1: Find the total amount of money Peter had after finding $2 on the street.
Initial amount + Amount found = Total amount
$1 + $2 = $3

Step 2: Add the amount Peter earned from his dog-walking job to the total amount he had after finding $2 on the street.
Total amount after finding money + Amount earned from dog-walking = Final total amount
$3 + $12 = $15

Therefore, Peter has a total of $15 now.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Billy has 9 kites. On his birthday, his friends gifted him 11 more kites. How many kites does Billy have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of kites Billy has after receiving the additional kites from his friends.

Given information:
- Billy initially had 9 kites.
- Billy's friends gifted him 11 more kites on his birthday.

To find the total number of kites, we need to add the initial number of kites and the number of kites received as gifts.

Step 1: Find the total number of kites.
Total number of kites = Initial number of kites + Number of kites received as gifts
Total number of kites = 9 + 11
Total number of kites = 20

Therefore, after receiving the additional kites from his friends, Billy now has 20 kites.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Billy initially had 4 kites. If his friends gifted him 11 more on his birthday, just like before, how many kites does Billy have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem.

Given information:
- Billy initially had 4 kites.
- Billy's friends gifted him 11 more kites on his birthday.

To find the total number of kites Billy has now, we need to add the initial number of kites and the number of kites received as gifts.

Step 1: Find the total number of kites.
Total number of kites = Initial number of kites + Number of kites received as gifts
Total number of kites = 4 + 11
Total number of kites = 15

Therefore, after receiving the additional 11 kites from his friends, Billy now has 15 kites.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Sasha roasted 6 marshmallows at her campfire. Her best friend, Yara, roasted 7 marshmallows at her campfire. How many marshmallows did they roast together?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of marshmallows roasted by Sasha and Yara.

Given information:
- Sasha roasted 6 marshmallows.
- Yara roasted 7 marshmallows.

To find the total number of marshmallows roasted, we need to add the number of marshmallows roasted by Sasha and Yara.

Total number of marshmallows roasted = Number of marshmallows roasted by Sasha + Number of marshmallows roasted by Yara
Total number of marshmallows roasted = 6 + 7
Total number of marshmallows roasted = 13

Therefore, Sasha and Yara roasted a total of 13 marshmallows together.

### Answer: 13

Expected answer: 13

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Sasha and Yara decided to roast more marshmallows after eating the first set. They roasted an additional 3 marshmallows. How many marshmallows did they roast in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In the previous problem, we found that Sasha and Yara roasted a total of 13 marshmallows initially.

Given information:
- Sasha and Yara roasted 13 marshmallows initially.
- They roasted an additional 3 marshmallows.

To find the total number of marshmallows roasted, we need to add the initial number of marshmallows roasted and the additional marshmallows roasted.

Total number of marshmallows roasted = Initial number of marshmallows roasted + Additional marshmallows roasted
Total number of marshmallows roasted = 13 + 3
Total number of marshmallows roasted = 16

Therefore, Sasha and Yara roasted a total of 16 marshmallows.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Sasha originally thought she roasted 6 marshmallows, but she realized later that she had actually roasted 13 marshmallows. Yara still roasted 7 marshmallows. How many marshmallows did they roast together, taking into account the new total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate the total number of marshmallows roasted by Sasha and Yara with the updated information.

Given information:
- Sasha roasted 13 marshmallows (updated from 6).
- Yara roasted 7 marshmallows.

To find the total number of marshmallows roasted, we need to add the number of marshmallows roasted by Sasha and Yara.

Total number of marshmallows roasted = Number of marshmallows roasted by Sasha + Number of marshmallows roasted by Yara
Total number of marshmallows roasted = 13 + 7
Total number of marshmallows roasted = 20

Therefore, with the updated information, Sasha and Yara roasted a total of 20 marshmallows together.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Jenna has 1 pillow already at home. She went shopping and added 14 more pillows to her collection. How many total pillows does Jenna have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of pillows Jenna already had at home to the number of pillows she bought while shopping.

Given information:
- Jenna had 1 pillow at home.
- Jenna added 14 more pillows to her collection.

Step 1: Find the total number of pillows Jenna has now.
Total number of pillows = Number of pillows at home + Number of pillows bought
Total number of pillows = 1 + 14
Total number of pillows = 15

Therefore, Jenna has a total of 15 pillows now.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After shopping, Jenna's friend gifts her 3 more pillows. Now, how many total pillows does Jenna have?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's take the previous information and add the new detail.

Previously, we found that Jenna had a total of 15 pillows after buying 14 new pillows and adding them to the 1 pillow she already had at home.

Now, Jenna's friend gifted her 3 more pillows.

To find the new total, we need to add the 3 gifted pillows to the previous total of 15 pillows.

Given information:
- Jenna had 15 pillows after shopping.
- Jenna's friend gifted her 3 more pillows.

Step 1: Find the new total number of pillows Jenna has.
New total number of pillows = Previous total number of pillows + Number of pillows gifted
New total number of pillows = 15 + 3
New total number of pillows = 18

Therefore, after receiving the 3 gifted pillows from her friend, Jenna now has a total of 18 pillows.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Instead, think about what would have happened if Jenna had only 1 pillow to start with and bought 4 on her shopping trip. How many pillows would Jenna have had then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's consider the new scenario where Jenna had 1 pillow initially and bought 4 pillows on her shopping trip.

Given information:
- Jenna had 1 pillow at home initially.
- Jenna bought 4 more pillows on her shopping trip.

To find the total number of pillows Jenna has now, we need to add the number of pillows she had initially to the number of pillows she bought.

Step 1: Find the total number of pillows Jenna has now.
Total number of pillows = Number of pillows at home initially + Number of pillows bought
Total number of pillows = 1 + 4
Total number of pillows = 5

Therefore, if Jenna had 1 pillow initially and bought 4 pillows on her shopping trip, she would have a total of 5 pillows now.

### Answer: 5

Expected answer: 5

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A dragon named Draco collects gold coins. One day, he finds 13 coins in a cave and later discovers 5 more coins in the forest. How many gold coins does Draco gather in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of coins Draco found in the cave and the number of coins he found in the forest.

Given information:
- Draco found 13 coins in a cave.
- Draco found 5 more coins in the forest.

Step 1: Add the number of coins found in the cave and the forest.
Number of coins found in the cave + Number of coins found in the forest = Total number of coins gathered
13 + 5 = 18

Therefore, Draco gathered a total of 18 gold coins.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After Draco gathered his gold coins, his friend Spot the dragon stumbled across 2 more gold coins during his own adventure. How many gold coins do the two dragons have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the total number of gold coins Draco gathered to the number of gold coins Spot found.

Given information:
- Draco gathered a total of 18 gold coins.
- Spot found 2 more gold coins.

Step 1: Add the total number of gold coins Draco gathered and the number of gold coins Spot found.
Total number of gold coins Draco gathered + Number of gold coins Spot found = Total number of gold coins the two dragons have
18 + 2 = 20

Therefore, the two dragons, Draco and Spot, have a total of 20 gold coins.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose that initially, Draco, instead of finding 13 gold coins in a cave, had only found 3 coins in the cave. With the additional 5 coins he discovered in the forest, how many gold coins does Draco gather in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- Draco found 3 coins in the cave.
- Draco found 5 more coins in the forest.

To find the total number of coins Draco gathered, we need to add the number of coins found in the cave and the number of coins found in the forest.

Step 1: Add the number of coins found in the cave and the forest.
Number of coins found in the cave + Number of coins found in the forest = Total number of coins gathered
3 + 5 = 8

Therefore, with the updated information, Draco gathered a total of 8 gold coins.

### Answer: 8

Expected answer: 8

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: George finds 1 puzzle piece in his drawer. Later, his brother gives him 19 more puzzle pieces. How many puzzle pieces does George have altogether?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of puzzle pieces George initially had with the number of puzzle pieces his brother gave him.

Given information:
- George initially had 1 puzzle piece in his drawer.
- George's brother gave him 19 more puzzle pieces.

Step 1: Find the total number of puzzle pieces George has by adding the initial number of puzzle pieces and the number of puzzle pieces his brother gave him.
Total number of puzzle pieces = Initial number of puzzle pieces + Number of puzzle pieces given by his brother
Total number of puzzle pieces = 1 + 19
Total number of puzzle pieces = 20

Therefore, George has 20 puzzle pieces altogether.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After some more searching, George finds that he had actually only found 1 puzzle piece in his drawer initially, not the 7 he thought before. He still receives 19 more puzzle pieces from his brother. With this correction in mind, how many puzzle pieces does George now have altogether?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the corrected initial number of puzzle pieces.

Given information:
- George initially had 1 puzzle piece in his drawer (not 7).
- George's brother gave him 19 more puzzle pieces.

Step 1: Find the total number of puzzle pieces George has by adding the initial number of puzzle pieces and the number of puzzle pieces his brother gave him.
Total number of puzzle pieces = Initial number of puzzle pieces + Number of puzzle pieces given by his brother
Total number of puzzle pieces = 1 + 19
Total number of puzzle pieces = 20

Therefore, with the correction that George initially had only 1 puzzle piece in his drawer, he now has a total of 20 puzzle pieces altogether after receiving 19 more from his brother.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Stella has 5 erasers. She then buys 1 more. How many erasers does Stella have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of erasers Stella has after buying 1 more.

Given information:
- Stella initially has 5 erasers.
- Stella buys 1 more eraser.

Step 1: Find the number of erasers Stella has after buying 1 more.
Number of erasers after buying 1 more = Initial number of erasers + Number of erasers bought
Number of erasers after buying 1 more = 5 + 1
Number of erasers after buying 1 more = 6

Therefore, after buying 1 more eraser, Stella now has 6 erasers.

### Answer: 6

Expected answer: 6

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In addition to her previous collection, Stella's best friend gifts her with 12 more erasers. How many erasers does Stella have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* Initially, Stella had 5 erasers
* She bought 1 more eraser, so she had 6 erasers
* Now, her best friend gifted her 12 more erasers

To find the total number of erasers Stella has now, we need to add the number of erasers she had previously (6) to the number of erasers gifted to her (12).

Total number of erasers = Previous number of erasers + Number of erasers gifted
Total number of erasers = 6 + 12
Total number of erasers = 18

Therefore, after receiving the gift of 12 erasers from her best friend, Stella now has a total of 18 erasers.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Kim had 4 doors in her house. She built an additional 9 doors. How many doors does Kim have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of doors Kim has after building the additional 9 doors.

Given information:
- Kim initially had 4 doors in her house.
- Kim built an additional 9 doors.

Step 1: Find the total number of doors by adding the initial number of doors and the additional doors built.
Total number of doors = Initial number of doors + Additional doors built
Total number of doors = 4 + 9
Total number of doors = 13

Therefore, Kim now has 13 doors in her house after building the additional 9 doors.

### Answer: 13

Expected answer: 13

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After building the additional 9 doors, Kim later decides to build 6 more doors. How many doors does Kim have now in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of doors Kim has after building the additional 6 doors.

Given information:
- Kim initially had 4 doors in her house.
- Kim built an additional 9 doors.
- Kim later built another 6 doors.

Step 1: Find the total number of doors after building the first 9 additional doors.
Total number of doors after building 9 doors = Initial number of doors + First additional doors built
Total number of doors after building 9 doors = 4 + 9 = 13 doors

Step 2: Find the total number of doors after building the second set of 6 additional doors.
Total number of doors after building 6 more doors = Total number of doors after building 9 doors + Second additional doors built
Total number of doors after building 6 more doors = 13 + 6 = 19 doors

Therefore, Kim now has a total of 19 doors in her house after building the additional 9 doors and then another 6 doors.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: If Ivan walked 2 miles to the north, and then walked the same distance to the east, how many miles in total did Ivan walk?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total distance Ivan walked.

Given information:
- Ivan walked 2 miles to the north.
- Ivan walked the same distance (2 miles) to the east.

Step 1: Find the distance Ivan walked to the north.
Distance walked to the north = 2 miles

Step 2: Find the distance Ivan walked to the east.
Distance walked to the east = 2 miles

Step 3: Find the total distance Ivan walked by adding the distances.
Total distance walked = Distance walked to the north + Distance walked to the east
Total distance walked = 2 miles + 2 miles
Total distance walked = 4 miles

Therefore, Ivan walked a total of 4 miles.

### Answer: 4

Expected answer: 4

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After walking 2 miles to the north and the same distance to the east, Ivan takes a detour and walks 8 more miles to his friend's house. How many miles in total did Ivan walk now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total distance Ivan walked, including the detour.

Given information:
- Ivan walked 2 miles to the north.
- Ivan walked 2 miles to the east.
- Ivan took a detour and walked 8 more miles to his friend's house.

Step 1: Find the distance Ivan walked to the north and east.
Distance walked to the north = 2 miles
Distance walked to the east = 2 miles
Total distance walked before the detour = 2 miles + 2 miles = 4 miles

Step 2: Find the distance Ivan walked during the detour.
Distance walked during the detour = 8 miles

Step 3: Find the total distance Ivan walked by adding the distances.
Total distance walked = Distance walked before the detour + Distance walked during the detour
Total distance walked = 4 miles + 8 miles
Total distance walked = 12 miles

Therefore, Ivan walked a total of 12 miles, including the detour to his friend's house.

### Answer: 12

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: If instead of walking 2 miles to the north, Ivan initially walked 4 miles to the north, and then walked the same distance to the east, how many miles in total did Ivan walk?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total distance Ivan walked.

Given information:
- Ivan walked 4 miles to the north initially.
- Ivan then walked the same distance (4 miles) to the east.

Step 1: Find the distance Ivan walked to the north.
Distance walked to the north = 4 miles

Step 2: Find the distance Ivan walked to the east.
Distance walked to the east = 4 miles

Step 3: Find the total distance Ivan walked by adding the distances.
Total distance walked = Distance walked to the north + Distance walked to the east
Total distance walked = 4 miles + 4 miles
Total distance walked = 8 miles

Therefore, Ivan walked a total of 8 miles.

### Answer: 8

Expected answer: 8

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Quincy starts with 9 toothpaste tubes in her bathroom. She then buys as many toothpaste tubes as she currently has. After that, she finds 2 more toothpaste tubes that she forgot she had in the drawer. How many toothpaste tubes does Quincy have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to follow the given information step-by-step.

Given:
- Quincy starts with 9 toothpaste tubes.
- She buys as many toothpaste tubes as she currently has.
- She finds 2 more toothpaste tubes in the drawer.

Step 1: Calculate the number of toothpaste tubes Quincy has after buying as many as she currently has.
Number of toothpaste tubes after buying = Initial number of toothpaste tubes + Number of toothpaste tubes bought
Number of toothpaste tubes after buying = 9 + 9 = 18

Step 2: Calculate the total number of toothpaste tubes Quincy has after finding 2 more in the drawer.
Total number of toothpaste tubes = Number of toothpaste tubes after buying + Number of toothpaste tubes found in the drawer
Total number of toothpaste tubes = 18 + 2 = 20

Therefore, Quincy has a total of 20 toothpaste tubes now.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose Quincy originally started with just 1 toothpaste tube in her bathroom instead of 9. She then buys as many toothpaste tubes as she currently has. After that, she discovers another 2 toothpaste tubes she forgot she had in the drawer. How many toothpaste tubes does Quincy have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the new information.

Given:
- Quincy starts with 1 toothpaste tube.
- She buys as many toothpaste tubes as she currently has.
- She finds 2 more toothpaste tubes in the drawer.

Step 1: Calculate the number of toothpaste tubes Quincy has after buying as many as she currently has.
Number of toothpaste tubes after buying = Initial number of toothpaste tubes + Number of toothpaste tubes bought
Number of toothpaste tubes after buying = 1 + 1 = 2

Step 2: Calculate the total number of toothpaste tubes Quincy has after finding 2 more in the drawer.
Total number of toothpaste tubes = Number of toothpaste tubes after buying + Number of toothpaste tubes found in the drawer
Total number of toothpaste tubes = 2 + 2 = 4

Therefore, Quincy has a total of 4 toothpaste tubes now.

### Answer: 4

Expected answer: 4

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Millie has 2 dresses. Her mom gave her the same amount as she originally had for her birthday. How many dresses does Millie have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of dresses Millie has after receiving the additional dresses from her mom.

Given information:
- Millie initially had 2 dresses.
- Millie's mom gave her the same amount of dresses as she originally had for her birthday.

Step 1: Find the number of dresses Millie received from her mom.
Number of dresses Millie originally had = 2
Number of dresses Millie received from her mom = Same as the original number of dresses = 2

Step 2: Find the total number of dresses Millie has now.
Total number of dresses = Original number of dresses + Number of dresses received from her mom
Total number of dresses = 2 + 2 = 4

Therefore, Millie has a total of 4 dresses now.

### Answer: 4

Expected answer: 4

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following her birthday, Millie's aunt presents her with 11 more dresses. How many dresses does Millie have now in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:

Given:
- Initially, Millie had 2 dresses.
- On her birthday, her mom gave her the same number of dresses as she originally had, which is 2 more dresses.
- After her birthday, her aunt gave her 11 more dresses.

Step 1: Find the total number of dresses Millie had after her birthday.
Total dresses after birthday = Initial dresses + Dresses from mom
Total dresses after birthday = 2 + 2 = 4 dresses

Step 2: Find the total number of dresses Millie has now after receiving dresses from her aunt.
Total dresses now = Total dresses after birthday + Dresses from aunt
Total dresses now = 4 + 11 = 15 dresses

Therefore, after receiving 11 more dresses from her aunt, Millie now has a total of 15 dresses.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: There are 2 logs already burning in the fireplace. George adds 9 more logs to keep the fire going. How many logs are now there in total in the fireplace?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of logs already burning in the fireplace to the number of logs added by George.

Given information:
- There are 2 logs already burning in the fireplace.
- George adds 9 more logs to keep the fire going.

Step 1: Find the total number of logs in the fireplace.
Total number of logs = Number of logs already burning + Number of logs added
Total number of logs = 2 + 9
Total number of logs = 11

Therefore, there are now 11 logs in total in the fireplace.

### Answer: 11

Expected answer: 11

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After George adds more logs to the fireplace, his friend Kim comes over and adds 7 more logs to the fire. Now, how many logs are there in total in the fireplace?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of logs already in the fireplace after George added his logs, and the number of logs added by Kim.

Given information:
- After George added 9 logs, there were 11 logs in the fireplace.
- Kim adds 7 more logs to the fire.

Step 1: Find the total number of logs in the fireplace after Kim adds her logs.
Total number of logs = Number of logs after George added his logs + Number of logs added by Kim
Total number of logs = 11 + 7
Total number of logs = 18

Therefore, there are now 18 logs in total in the fireplace after Kim adds her logs.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead of adding 2 logs to the fireplace at the start, George had added 10 logs. Then he added 9 more logs. How many logs would have been there in total in the fireplace in this scenario?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the new information.

Given information:
- Initially, George added 10 logs to the fireplace.
- Then, George added 9 more logs to the fireplace.

Step 1: Find the total number of logs in the fireplace after the first addition.
Number of logs after the first addition = 10 logs

Step 2: Find the total number of logs in the fireplace after the second addition.
Number of logs after the second addition = Number of logs after the first addition + Number of logs added
Number of logs after the second addition = 10 + 9
Number of logs after the second addition = 19 logs

Therefore, in this scenario, there would have been a total of 19 logs in the fireplace.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A robot has 8 gears for moving. The manufacturer adds 4 more gears to improve its functionality. How many gears does the robot have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of gears the robot has after adding the new gears.

Given information:
- The robot initially has 8 gears for moving.
- The manufacturer adds 4 more gears to improve its functionality.

To find the total number of gears, we need to add the initial number of gears and the number of gears added.

Total number of gears = Initial number of gears + Number of gears added
Total number of gears = 8 + 4
Total number of gears = 12

Therefore, after adding 4 more gears, the robot now has 12 gears.

### Answer: 12

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following on from the previous question, the manufacturer decides to add 3 more gears to the robot for additional stability. Now, how many gears does the robot have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In the previous question, we found that the robot had 12 gears after adding 4 more gears to the initial 8 gears.

Now, the manufacturer decides to add 3 more gears to the robot for additional stability.

Given information:
- The robot initially had 8 gears.
- After adding 4 more gears, the robot had 12 gears.
- The manufacturer adds 3 more gears for additional stability.

To find the total number of gears after adding the 3 new gears, we need to add the number of gears the robot had before and the number of gears added.

Total number of gears = Number of gears before + Number of gears added
Total number of gears = 12 + 3
Total number of gears = 15

Therefore, after adding 3 more gears for additional stability, the robot now has a total of 15 gears.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following on from the previous scenario, consider if the robot initially had 10 gears instead of 8. The manufacturer still adds 4 more gears to improve its functionality. How many gears does the robot have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this scenario, the initial number of gears the robot had is 10, and the manufacturer adds 4 more gears to improve its functionality.

Given information:
- The robot initially has 10 gears.
- The manufacturer adds 4 more gears.

To find the total number of gears after adding the new gears, we need to add the initial number of gears and the number of gears added.

Total number of gears = Initial number of gears + Number of gears added
Total number of gears = 10 + 4
Total number of gears = 14

Therefore, after adding 4 more gears to the initial 10 gears, the robot now has 14 gears.

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Jerry the monkey collects 7 bananas. His friend, Alan, helps him collect 4 more bananas. Iso the Iguana adds 1 more banana to their collection. How many bananas have they collected in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of bananas collected by Jerry, Alan, and Iso.

Given information:
- Jerry collected 7 bananas.
- Alan helped Jerry collect 4 more bananas.
- Iso the Iguana added 1 more banana to their collection.

Step 1: Find the total number of bananas collected by Jerry and Alan.
Jerry's bananas + Alan's bananas = Total bananas collected by Jerry and Alan
7 + 4 = 11 bananas

Step 2: Add Iso's banana to the total.
Total bananas collected by Jerry and Alan + Iso's banana = Total bananas collected
11 + 1 = 12 bananas

Therefore, they have collected a total of 12 bananas.

### Answer: 12

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After all the initial collecting, Jerry the monkey went back and found 7 more bananas. Now, how many bananas have they collected in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's update the total number of bananas collected after Jerry found 7 more bananas.

Given information:
- Initially, they had collected a total of 12 bananas.
- Jerry found 7 more bananas.

Step 1: Add the 7 more bananas that Jerry found to the initial total.
Initial total bananas + Jerry's additional bananas = New total bananas
12 + 7 = 19 bananas

Therefore, after Jerry found 7 more bananas, they have collected a total of 19 bananas.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: 10 friends boarded a bus for a field trip. At the next stop, 6 more friends got on. How many friends are on the bus in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of friends who initially boarded the bus and the number of friends who got on at the next stop.

Given information:
- 10 friends boarded the bus initially.
- 6 more friends got on at the next stop.

Step 1: Find the total number of friends on the bus.
Total number of friends = Number of friends initially on the bus + Number of friends who got on at the next stop
Total number of friends = 10 + 6
Total number of friends = 16

Therefore, there are 16 friends on the bus in total now.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following the field trip, 3 teachers decided to join the students on the bus. How many people are on the bus in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of teachers who joined the bus to the total number of people already on the bus.

Given information:
- There were initially 16 friends (students) on the bus.
- 3 teachers decided to join the students on the bus.

Step 1: Find the total number of people on the bus after the teachers joined.
Total number of people = Number of friends (students) initially on the bus + Number of teachers who joined
Total number of people = 16 + 3
Total number of people = 19

Therefore, there are 19 people on the bus in total now.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose originally there were 11 friends who boarded the bus for a field trip, instead of 10, and 6 more friends got on at the next stop, like before. How many friends are on the bus in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- Originally, 11 friends boarded the bus.
- At the next stop, 6 more friends got on the bus.

To find the total number of friends on the bus, we need to add the number of friends who originally boarded the bus and the number of friends who got on at the next stop.

Step 1: Find the total number of friends on the bus.
Total number of friends = Number of friends originally on the bus + Number of friends who got on at the next stop
Total number of friends = 11 + 6
Total number of friends = 17

Therefore, with the updated information, there are 17 friends on the bus in total now.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Samantha has 5 tent poles. She needs an equal number of tent poles for her friend's tent as well. How many tent poles does Samantha need in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of tent poles required for both Samantha's tent and her friend's tent.

Given information:
- Samantha has 5 tent poles.
- She needs an equal number of tent poles for her friend's tent.

Since Samantha needs an equal number of tent poles for her friend's tent, we can double the number of tent poles she already has.

Step 1: Find the number of tent poles needed for Samantha's friend's tent.
Number of tent poles needed for Samantha's friend's tent = Number of tent poles Samantha has
Number of tent poles needed for Samantha's friend's tent = 5

Step 2: Find the total number of tent poles needed for both tents.
Total number of tent poles needed = Number of tent poles Samantha has + Number of tent poles needed for Samantha's friend's tent
Total number of tent poles needed = 5 + 5
Total number of tent poles needed = 10

Therefore, Samantha needs a total of 10 tent poles for both her tent and her friend's tent.

### Answer: 10

Expected answer: 10

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Samantha has 5 tent poles. She needs an equal number of tent poles for her friend's tent as well. After setting up both tents, Samantha realizes she needs another set of 5 poles for a small storage tent. How many tent poles does Samantha need in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this problem, we need to find the total number of tent poles Samantha needs for her tent, her friend's tent, and the small storage tent.

Given information:
- Samantha has 5 tent poles.
- She needs an equal number of tent poles for her friend's tent.
- After setting up both tents, she needs another set of 5 poles for a small storage tent.

Step 1: Find the number of tent poles needed for Samantha's tent and her friend's tent.
Number of tent poles needed for Samantha's tent = 5
Number of tent poles needed for her friend's tent = 5 (equal to Samantha's tent)
Total number of tent poles needed for both tents = 5 + 5 = 10

Step 2: Find the total number of tent poles needed, including the small storage tent.
Total number of tent poles needed = Number of tent poles needed for both tents + Number of tent poles needed for the small storage tent
Total number of tent poles needed = 10 + 5
Total number of tent poles needed = 15

Therefore, Samantha needs a total of 15 tent poles for her tent, her friend's tent, and the small storage tent.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Robert has 16 dollars in his wallet. He earns 3 more dollars for helping his neighbor with groceries. How much money does he have now in his wallet?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the amount of money Robert initially had in his wallet to the amount he earned for helping his neighbor.

Given information:
- Robert has $16 in his wallet.
- Robert earned $3 for helping his neighbor with groceries.

Step 1: Add the initial amount of money in Robert's wallet to the amount he earned.
Initial amount in wallet + Amount earned = Total amount in wallet
$16 + $3 = $19

Therefore, Robert now has $19 in his wallet.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Now ponder this: instead of finding 3 more dollars, let's say Robert only found 1 dollar. With this in mind, how much money would Robert now have in his wallet?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's reconsider the problem with the new information.

Given information:
- Robert initially had $16 in his wallet.
- Instead of earning $3, Robert found $1.

To find the total amount of money Robert has now, we need to add the initial amount in his wallet ($16) to the amount he found ($1).

Step 1: Add the initial amount in Robert's wallet to the amount he found.
Initial amount in wallet + Amount found = Total amount in wallet
$16 + $1 = $17

Therefore, with Robert finding $1 instead of earning $3, he now has $17 in his wallet.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: John has 3 pencils in his pencil case. He adds 15 more pencils. How many pencils does John have in his pencil case now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of pencils John has after adding 15 more pencils to the initial 3 pencils.

Given information:
- John initially has 3 pencils in his pencil case.
- John adds 15 more pencils to his pencil case.

Step 1: Find the total number of pencils after adding 15 more pencils.
Total number of pencils = Initial number of pencils + Number of pencils added
Total number of pencils = 3 + 15
Total number of pencils = 18

Therefore, after adding 15 more pencils, John has 18 pencils in his pencil case.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: John realizes that he actually had 4 pencils in his pencil case to start with, not 3. He adds the same 15 more pencils. How many pencils does John have in his pencil case now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- John initially had 4 pencils in his pencil case.
- John adds 15 more pencils to his pencil case.

Step 1: Find the total number of pencils after adding 15 more pencils.
Total number of pencils = Initial number of pencils + Number of pencils added
Total number of pencils = 4 + 15
Total number of pencils = 19

Therefore, after adding 15 more pencils to the initial 4 pencils, John now has 19 pencils in his pencil case.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: For a snowball fight, Sally starts off with 11 snowballs and her friend John adds 9 more to her arsenal. How many snowballs does Sally have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of snowballs Sally started with and the number of snowballs John added.

Given information:
- Sally starts off with 11 snowballs.
- John adds 9 more snowballs to Sally's arsenal.

Step 1: Add the number of snowballs Sally started with and the number of snowballs John added.
Sally's initial snowballs + John's added snowballs = Total number of snowballs
11 + 9 = 20

Therefore, Sally has a total of 20 snowballs for the snowball fight.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: For the snowball fight, let's say Sally initially started with 11 snowballs. But what if Sally had only started with 1 snowball, and John added 11 to her collection as before? How many snowballs would Sally have in total then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's consider the new scenario.

Given information:
- Sally initially starts with 1 snowball.
- John adds 11 snowballs to Sally's collection.

To find the total number of snowballs Sally has, we need to add the number of snowballs she started with and the number of snowballs John added.

Step 1: Add the number of snowballs Sally started with and the number of snowballs John added.
Sally's initial snowballs + John's added snowballs = Total number of snowballs
1 + 11 = 12

Therefore, if Sally initially started with 1 snowball and John added 11 snowballs to her collection, Sally would have a total of 12 snowballs for the snowball fight.

### Answer: 12

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Max has one house. He inherits 11 more houses from his grandfather. How many houses does Max have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of houses Max has after inheriting 11 more houses from his grandfather.

Given information:
- Max initially has 1 house.
- Max inherits 11 more houses from his grandfather.

Step 1: Find the total number of houses Max has after inheriting the additional houses.
Total number of houses = Initial number of houses + Number of inherited houses
Total number of houses = 1 + 11
Total number of houses = 12

Therefore, Max now has 12 houses.

### Answer: 12

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Max has one house. He inherits 11 more houses from his grandfather. Later on, Max decides to purchase 5 more houses. How many houses does Max have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of houses Max has after inheriting 11 houses from his grandfather and purchasing 5 more houses.

Given information:
- Max initially has 1 house.
- Max inherits 11 more houses from his grandfather.
- Max purchases 5 more houses.

Step 1: Find the total number of houses Max has after inheriting the additional houses.
Total number of houses after inheriting = Initial number of houses + Number of inherited houses
Total number of houses after inheriting = 1 + 11 = 12 houses

Step 2: Find the total number of houses Max has after purchasing 5 more houses.
Total number of houses after purchasing = Total number of houses after inheriting + Number of purchased houses
Total number of houses after purchasing = 12 + 5 = 17 houses

Therefore, Max now has a total of 17 houses.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous question, we mentioned that Max initially had one house and then inherited 11 more. But what if instead, he initially had one house and later inherited 13 more houses? How many houses would Max have then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this updated problem.

Given information:
- Max initially had 1 house.
- Max inherited 13 more houses from his grandfather.

To find the total number of houses Max has now, we need to add the initial number of houses he had and the number of houses he inherited.

Step 1: Find the total number of houses Max has after inheriting the additional houses.
Total number of houses = Initial number of houses + Number of inherited houses
Total number of houses = 1 + 13
Total number of houses = 14

Therefore, if Max initially had 1 house and later inherited 13 more houses from his grandfather, he would now have a total of 14 houses.

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Marie had 15 ice skates in her collection. She then added 4 more ice skates to her collection. How many ice skates does she have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of ice skates Marie has after adding 4 more to her initial collection.

Given information:
- Marie initially had 15 ice skates in her collection.
- She added 4 more ice skates to her collection.

Step 1: Find the number of ice skates Marie has after adding 4 more.
Number of ice skates after adding 4 more = Initial number of ice skates + Number of ice skates added
Number of ice skates after adding 4 more = 15 + 4
Number of ice skates after adding 4 more = 19

Therefore, Marie now has 19 ice skates in her collection.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: If instead of the initial 15 ice skates in her collection, Marie had originally owned 16 ice skates before adding the 4 more, how many ice skates would she then have in her collection?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the new information.

Given information:
- Marie initially had 16 ice skates in her collection.
- She added 4 more ice skates to her collection.

Step 1: Find the number of ice skates Marie has after adding 4 more.
Number of ice skates after adding 4 more = Initial number of ice skates + Number of ice skates added
Number of ice skates after adding 4 more = 16 + 4
Number of ice skates after adding 4 more = 20

Therefore, if Marie had originally owned 16 ice skates before adding the 4 more, she would now have 20 ice skates in her collection.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Tommy had 10 cards from his favorite soccer players and he just bought 4 more. How many soccer cards does Tommy have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of soccer cards Tommy has after buying 4 more.

Given information:
- Tommy initially had 10 soccer cards.
- Tommy bought 4 more soccer cards.

Step 1: Find the number of soccer cards Tommy has after buying the new cards.
Number of soccer cards after buying new cards = Initial number of soccer cards + Number of new cards bought
Number of soccer cards after buying new cards = 10 + 4
Number of soccer cards after buying new cards = 14

Therefore, Tommy now has 14 soccer cards.

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following up from the previous problem where Tommy had 10 soccer cards and bought 4 more, his friend Lucy gives him 4 more soccer cards for his birthday. How many soccer cards does Tommy have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's continue from the previous problem.

Given information:
- Tommy initially had 10 soccer cards.
- Tommy bought 4 more soccer cards, so he had 14 soccer cards.
- Lucy gave Tommy 4 more soccer cards for his birthday.

To find the total number of soccer cards Tommy has now, we need to add the number of cards Lucy gave him to the number of cards he already had.

Step 1: Find the total number of soccer cards Tommy has after receiving the cards from Lucy.
Total number of soccer cards = Number of soccer cards Tommy had before + Number of cards Lucy gave him
Total number of soccer cards = 14 + 4
Total number of soccer cards = 18

Therefore, after receiving the 4 soccer cards from Lucy for his birthday, Tommy now has a total of 18 soccer cards.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following up from the original problem where Tommy originally had 10 soccer cards and then bought 4 more, what if Tommy originally only had 1 soccer card and then bought 4 more? How many soccer cards would he have then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this new problem.

Given information:
- Tommy originally had 1 soccer card.
- Tommy bought 4 more soccer cards.

To find the total number of soccer cards Tommy has now, we need to add the number of cards he originally had to the number of new cards he bought.

Step 1: Find the total number of soccer cards Tommy has now.
Total number of soccer cards = Number of cards originally + Number of new cards bought
Total number of soccer cards = 1 + 4
Total number of soccer cards = 5

Therefore, if Tommy originally had 1 soccer card and then bought 4 more, he would now have 5 soccer cards.

### Answer: 5

Expected answer: 5

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A farmer has 1 apple tree in his orchard. He plants 2 more, along with the trees equivalent to the first number in the orchard. How many apple trees are there in his orchard now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of apple trees in the orchard after planting the new trees.

Given information:
- Initially, the farmer has 1 apple tree in the orchard.
- The farmer plants 2 more apple trees.
- The farmer also plants a number of trees equivalent to the first number (1) in the orchard.

Step 1: Find the number of trees planted equivalent to the first number.
Number of trees planted equivalent to the first number = 1

Step 2: Find the total number of apple trees after planting the new trees.
Total number of apple trees = Initial number of trees + Number of trees planted (2) + Number of trees planted equivalent to the first number
Total number of apple trees = 1 + 2 + 1
Total number of apple trees = 4

Therefore, there are now 4 apple trees in the farmer's orchard.

### Answer: 4

Expected answer: 4

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the previous situation, the farmer realizes he made a mistake counting. Actually, he initially had 1 apple tree and he added 3 more, not 2. With the same equation as before, where the number of trees planted is added to the initial number of trees, and the resulting number is then added to the initial number of trees. How many apple trees does the farmer have in his orchard now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- Initially, the farmer had 1 apple tree in the orchard.
- The farmer planted 3 more apple trees.
- The farmer also planted a number of trees equivalent to the initial number (1) of trees in the orchard.

Step 1: Find the number of trees planted equivalent to the initial number.
Number of trees planted equivalent to the initial number = 1

Step 2: Find the total number of apple trees after planting the new trees.
Total number of apple trees = Initial number of trees + Number of trees planted (3) + Number of trees planted equivalent to the initial number
Total number of apple trees = 1 + 3 + 1
Total number of apple trees = 5

Therefore, after planting the new trees, the farmer now has 5 apple trees in his orchard.

### Answer: 5

Expected answer: 5

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Shail discovers 7 gems during a digging expedition. In a hidden grotto, he finds 9 more gems along with the ones he originally had. How many gems did Shail have in total after the discovery?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of gems Shail had after the discovery in the hidden grotto.

Given information:
- Shail initially discovered 7 gems during a digging expedition.
- In a hidden grotto, he found 9 more gems along with the ones he originally had.

Step 1: Find the number of gems Shail had after the discovery in the hidden grotto.
Number of gems after the discovery = Number of gems initially discovered + Number of gems found in the hidden grotto
Number of gems after the discovery = 7 + 9
Number of gems after the discovery = 16

Therefore, Shail had a total of 16 gems after the discovery in the hidden grotto.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After collecting all the gems from the grotto, Shail stumbles upon a sunken ship, where he unearths another chest containing 4 additional gems along with the gems he already had. How many gems does Shail have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of gems Shail has after finding the additional gems in the sunken ship.

Given information:
- Initially, Shail had 16 gems after the discovery in the hidden grotto.
- In the sunken ship, he found a chest containing 4 additional gems.

Step 1: Find the total number of gems Shail has after finding the additional gems in the sunken ship.
Total number of gems = Number of gems after the discovery in the hidden grotto + Number of additional gems found in the sunken ship
Total number of gems = 16 + 4
Total number of gems = 20

Therefore, Shail has a total of 20 gems after finding the additional gems in the sunken ship.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Originally, Shail discovered 9 gems during a digging expedition, not 7 as previously stated. If he still finds 9 more gems in the hidden grotto along with the ones he originally had, how many gems does Shail have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the updated information.

Given information:
- Shail initially discovered 9 gems during a digging expedition.
- In a hidden grotto, he found 9 more gems along with the ones he originally had.

Step 1: Find the number of gems Shail had after the discovery in the hidden grotto.
Number of gems after the discovery = Number of gems initially discovered + Number of gems found in the hidden grotto
Number of gems after the discovery = 9 + 9
Number of gems after the discovery = 18

Therefore, with the updated information, Shail had a total of 18 gems after the discovery in the hidden grotto.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Sam has 7 favorite numbers. He remembers an additional four numbers that he likes. How many numbers does Sam like in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of numbers that Sam likes by adding the number of his favorite numbers and the additional numbers he remembers.

Given information:
- Sam has 7 favorite numbers.
- Sam remembers an additional 4 numbers that he likes.

Step 1: Find the total number of numbers that Sam likes.
Total number of numbers Sam likes = Number of favorite numbers + Additional numbers he remembers
Total number of numbers Sam likes = 7 + 4
Total number of numbers Sam likes = 11

Therefore, Sam likes a total of 11 numbers.

### Answer: 11

Expected answer: 11

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After considering the numbers he remembers, Sam considered how those numbers combined with his favorites, and finds 7 more numbers he likes. Adding this to his initial list, how many numbers does Sam like in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* Initially, Sam had 7 favorite numbers
* Then he remembered an additional 4 numbers he likes
* So the total at that point was 7 + 4 = 11 numbers he likes
* Now, after considering the numbers he remembers, he finds 7 more numbers he likes

To find the new total, we take the previous total (11) and add the 7 new numbers:
* Previous total: 11
* Add 7 new numbers: 11 + 7 = 18

Therefore, the total number of numbers Sam likes now is 18.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Sam originally thought he had only 1 favorite number. But, after some thought, he remembered an additional four numbers that he likes. Considering this new count, how many numbers does Sam like in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's look at the updated information:

* Originally, Sam thought he had 1 favorite number
* After some thought, he remembered an additional 4 numbers that he likes

To find the total number of numbers Sam likes now, we need to add the original 1 favorite number to the additional 4 numbers he remembered.

Total number of numbers Sam likes = Original favorite number + Additional numbers remembered
Total number of numbers Sam likes = 1 + 4
Total number of numbers Sam likes = 5

Therefore, considering the new count, Sam likes a total of 5 numbers.

### Answer: 5

Expected answer: 5

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Lisa started the day with 1 apple. She then picked 6 more apples from her garden. How many apples does Lisa have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of apples Lisa has after picking 6 more apples from her garden.

Given information:
- Lisa started the day with 1 apple.
- Lisa picked 6 more apples from her garden.

Step 1: Find the total number of apples Lisa has now.
Total number of apples = Number of apples she started with + Number of apples picked from the garden
Total number of apples = 1 + 6
Total number of apples = 7

Therefore, Lisa has 7 apples now.

### Answer: 7

Expected answer: 7

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Lisa started the day with 1 apple. She then picked 6 more apples from her garden. Later in the day, Lisa's mother brought home 10 more apples. Now, how many apples does Lisa have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of apples Lisa has after starting with 1 apple, picking 6 more apples from her garden, and her mother bringing home 10 more apples.

Given information:
- Lisa started the day with 1 apple.
- Lisa picked 6 more apples from her garden.
- Lisa's mother brought home 10 more apples.

Step 1: Find the total number of apples Lisa has after picking 6 more apples from her garden.
Total number of apples after picking from the garden = Number of apples she started with + Number of apples picked from the garden
Total number of apples after picking from the garden = 1 + 6 = 7 apples

Step 2: Find the total number of apples Lisa has after her mother brought home 10 more apples.
Total number of apples = Number of apples after picking from the garden + Number of apples brought home by her mother
Total number of apples = 7 + 10 = 17 apples

Therefore, Lisa has a total of 17 apples.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous scenario, Lisa started the day with 1 apple. Suppose instead she started the day with 1 apple and then picked 16 more apples from her garden instead of 6. Now, how many apples does Lisa have?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this new scenario, the given information is:
- Lisa started the day with 1 apple.
- Lisa picked 16 more apples from her garden.

To find the total number of apples Lisa has now, we need to add the number of apples she started with and the number of apples she picked from the garden.

Step 1: Find the total number of apples Lisa has now.
Total number of apples = Number of apples she started with + Number of apples picked from the garden
Total number of apples = 1 + 16
Total number of apples = 17

Therefore, if Lisa started the day with 1 apple and then picked 16 more apples from her garden, she now has 17 apples.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Peter has 6 candles at home. His friend Mary gives him a few more candles as a gift, increasing his total number of candles by 10. How many candles does Peter have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of candles Peter has after receiving the gift from Mary.

Given information:
- Peter initially has 6 candles at home.
- Mary gives him a few more candles as a gift.
- The gift increases Peter's total number of candles by 10.

Step 1: Find the number of candles Mary gave to Peter.
Increase in the number of candles = 10

Step 2: Find the total number of candles Peter has now.
Total number of candles = Initial number of candles + Number of candles received as a gift
Total number of candles = 6 + 10
Total number of candles = 16

Therefore, Peter now has 16 candles.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In addition to the candles he already has, Peter's mom gives him 3 more candles. How many candles does Peter have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of candles Peter has after receiving 3 more candles from his mom.

Given information:
- Peter initially had 16 candles (from the previous problem).
- Peter's mom gives him 3 more candles.

Step 1: Find the total number of candles Peter has now.
Total number of candles = Initial number of candles + Number of candles received from mom
Total number of candles = 16 + 3
Total number of candles = 19

Therefore, Peter now has 19 candles.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if Peter originally had only 6 candles and Mary gave him only 5 more candles as a gift, how many candles would Peter have then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's reconsider the problem with the new information.

Given information:
- Peter originally had 6 candles.
- Mary gave him 5 more candles as a gift.

To find the total number of candles Peter has now, we need to add the number of candles he originally had to the number of candles he received as a gift.

Step 1: Find the total number of candles Peter has now.
Total number of candles = Initial number of candles + Number of candles received as a gift
Total number of candles = 6 + 5
Total number of candles = 11

Therefore, if Peter originally had 6 candles and Mary gave him 5 more candles as a gift, then Peter would have 11 candles in total.

### Answer: 11

Expected answer: 11

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Captain Redbeard hid 15 pieces of his almighty treasure on an island and then found 3 more pieces en route. How many pieces of treasure does Captain Redbeard have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of treasure pieces Captain Redbeard has after finding 3 more pieces.

Given information:
- Captain Redbeard initially hid 15 pieces of treasure on an island.
- Captain Redbeard found 3 more pieces of treasure en route.

Step 1: Find the total number of treasure pieces Captain Redbeard has now.
Total treasure pieces = Initially hidden treasure pieces + Newly found treasure pieces
Total treasure pieces = 15 + 3
Total treasure pieces = 18

Therefore, Captain Redbeard now has 18 pieces of treasure.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A wizard casts a spell twice during a magic duel. Each spell he casts summons 4 mystical eagles to aid him. How many mystical eagles has the wizard summoned in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of mystical eagles summoned by the wizard after casting the spell twice.

Given information:
- The wizard casts the spell twice.
- Each time the spell is cast, it summons 4 mystical eagles.

Step 1: Find the number of mystical eagles summoned by the first spell.
Number of mystical eagles summoned by the first spell = 4

Step 2: Find the number of mystical eagles summoned by the second spell.
Number of mystical eagles summoned by the second spell = 4

Step 3: Find the total number of mystical eagles summoned by adding the number of eagles summoned by both spells.
Total number of mystical eagles summoned = Number of eagles summoned by the first spell + Number of eagles summoned by the second spell
Total number of mystical eagles summoned = 4 + 4 = 8

Therefore, the wizard has summoned a total of 8 mystical eagles after casting the spell twice.

### Answer: 8

Expected answer: 8

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the first round of the magic duel, the wizard managed to summon another round of eagles with two more spells that each summon 4 mystical eagles. How many mystical eagles has the wizard summoned in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* Initially, the wizard summoned 8 mystical eagles (from casting the spell twice, with each spell summoning 4 eagles)
* After the first round, the wizard cast two more spells
* Each of these two additional spells summoned 4 mystical eagles

To find the total number of mystical eagles summoned, we need to add the number of eagles summoned by the two new spells to the initial 8 eagles.

Number of eagles summoned by the first new spell = 4
Number of eagles summoned by the second new spell = 4

Total number of new eagles summoned = 4 + 4 = 8

Total number of mystical eagles summoned = Initial number of eagles + Number of new eagles
Total number of mystical eagles summoned = 8 + 8 = 16

Therefore, after the first round of the magic duel and casting two more spells, the wizard has summoned a total of 16 mystical eagles.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Oliver has 8 books in his backpack. His friend lends him 5 more books. How many books does Oliver have now in his backpack?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of books Oliver has after his friend lends him 5 more books.

Given information:
- Oliver initially has 8 books in his backpack.
- Oliver's friend lends him 5 more books.

Step 1: Find the total number of books Oliver has after his friend lends him 5 more books.
Total number of books = Initial number of books + Number of books lent by friend
Total number of books = 8 + 5
Total number of books = 13

Therefore, after his friend lends him 5 more books, Oliver has 13 books in his backpack.

### Answer: 13

Expected answer: 13

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After borrowing 5 more books from his friend, Oliver finds an interesting book in the library and adds it to his backpack. Now, how many books does Oliver have in his backpack?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* Initially, Oliver had 8 books in his backpack
* His friend lent him 5 more books, so he had 8 + 5 = 13 books
* Then, Oliver found an interesting book in the library and added it to his backpack

To find the new total, we take the previous total (13 books) and add 1 more book:
* 13 books + 1 book = 14 books

Therefore, after borrowing 5 books from his friend and adding 1 book from the library, Oliver now has 14 books in his backpack.

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead of originally having 8 books in his backpack, Oliver had started with 14 books. After his friend lent him 5 more books, how many books does Oliver now have in his backpack?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- Oliver initially has 14 books in his backpack.
- Oliver's friend lends him 5 more books.

Step 1: Find the total number of books Oliver has after his friend lends him 5 more books.
Total number of books = Initial number of books + Number of books lent by friend
Total number of books = 14 + 5
Total number of books = 19

Therefore, after his friend lends him 5 more books, Oliver now has 19 books in his backpack.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Mariah messages her 5 best friends. She then sends messages too, to 15 of her colleagues at work. How many messages in total did Mariah send?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of messages Mariah sent to her friends and colleagues.

Given information:
- Mariah sent messages to 5 best friends.
- Mariah sent messages to 15 colleagues at work.

Step 1: Find the total number of messages sent.
Total messages sent = Messages sent to best friends + Messages sent to colleagues
Total messages sent = 5 + 15
Total messages sent = 20

Therefore, Mariah sent a total of 20 messages.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Mariah decides to message one less friend than she did before, leaving her sending messages to 4 friends. She still messages the same 15 colleagues at work as before. How many messages does Mariah send in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of messages Mariah sent after reducing the number of friends she messaged.

Given information:
- Mariah sent messages to 4 friends (one less than before).
- Mariah sent messages to 15 colleagues at work (same as before).

Step 1: Find the total number of messages sent.
Total messages sent = Messages sent to friends + Messages sent to colleagues
Total messages sent = 4 + 15
Total messages sent = 19

Therefore, Mariah sent a total of 19 messages after reducing the number of friends she messaged by one.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Olivia had 4 flowers in her garden. She and her friend Addison planted 10 more. Later, they added 4 more. How many flowers are there in Olivia's garden now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of flowers in Olivia's garden after all the additions.

Given information:
- Initially, Olivia had 4 flowers in her garden.
- Olivia and her friend Addison planted 10 more flowers.
- Later, they added 4 more flowers.

Step 1: Find the number of flowers after planting 10 more.
Initial number of flowers + Flowers planted = Number of flowers after planting 10 more
4 + 10 = 14 flowers

Step 2: Find the total number of flowers after adding 4 more.
Number of flowers after planting 10 more + Flowers added later = Total number of flowers
14 + 4 = 18 flowers

Therefore, there are 18 flowers in Olivia's garden now.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After Olivia and Addison counted their flowers, Emily came over and they all planted 1 more flower. How many flowers are there in Olivia's garden now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:

Given information:
- Initially, there were 18 flowers in Olivia's garden.
- Emily came over, and they planted 1 more flower.

Step 1: Find the total number of flowers after planting 1 more flower.
Initial number of flowers + Flowers planted = Total number of flowers
18 + 1 = 19 flowers

Therefore, after Emily came over and they planted 1 more flower, there are now 19 flowers in Olivia's garden.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's reconsider the situation with different numbers. This time, Olivia initially had 4 flowers in her garden. She and Addison planted 9 more instead of 10. They still added 4 more later. With these changes, how many flowers are there in Olivia's garden now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's reconsider the problem with the new numbers.

Given information:
- Initially, Olivia had 4 flowers in her garden.
- Olivia and her friend Addison planted 9 more flowers (instead of 10).
- Later, they added 4 more flowers.

Step 1: Find the number of flowers after planting 9 more.
Initial number of flowers + Flowers planted = Number of flowers after planting 9 more
4 + 9 = 13 flowers

Step 2: Find the total number of flowers after adding 4 more.
Number of flowers after planting 9 more + Flowers added later = Total number of flowers
13 + 4 = 17 flowers

Therefore, with the new numbers, there are 17 flowers in Olivia's garden now.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Tommy the turtle found one precious gemstone on his way to school. Later in the day, he finds a treasure chest containing 14 more gemstones. How many gemstones does Tommy have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of gemstones Tommy has after finding the treasure chest.

Given information:
- Tommy initially found one precious gemstone on his way to school.
- Later, he found a treasure chest containing 14 more gemstones.

Step 1: Find the number of gemstones Tommy had initially.
Number of gemstones initially = 1

Step 2: Find the number of gemstones Tommy found in the treasure chest.
Number of gemstones in the treasure chest = 14

Step 3: Find the total number of gemstones Tommy has now.
Total number of gemstones = Number of gemstones initially + Number of gemstones in the treasure chest
Total number of gemstones = 1 + 14
Total number of gemstones = 15

Therefore, Tommy has 15 gemstones now.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After showing his teacher his gemstones, his teacher gives him 5 more as a reward for his honesty. How many gemstones does Tommy have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of gemstones Tommy has after receiving the additional gemstones from his teacher.

Given information:
- Initially, Tommy had 15 gemstones.
- His teacher gave him 5 more gemstones as a reward.

Step 1: Find the number of gemstones Tommy had initially.
Number of gemstones initially = 15

Step 2: Find the number of gemstones Tommy received from his teacher.
Number of gemstones received from the teacher = 5

Step 3: Find the total number of gemstones Tommy has now.
Total number of gemstones = Number of gemstones initially + Number of gemstones received from the teacher
Total number of gemstones = 15 + 5
Total number of gemstones = 20

Therefore, Tommy has 20 gemstones now.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if Tommy originally found only one gemstone and then found a treasure chest containing 19 gemstones, instead of 14? How many gemstones would Tommy have then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the new information.

Given information:
- Tommy initially found one precious gemstone on his way to school.
- Later, he found a treasure chest containing 19 gemstones.

Step 1: Find the number of gemstones Tommy had initially.
Number of gemstones initially = 1

Step 2: Find the number of gemstones Tommy found in the treasure chest.
Number of gemstones in the treasure chest = 19

Step 3: Find the total number of gemstones Tommy has now.
Total number of gemstones = Number of gemstones initially + Number of gemstones in the treasure chest
Total number of gemstones = 1 + 19
Total number of gemstones = 20

Therefore, if Tommy initially found one gemstone and then found a treasure chest containing 19 gemstones, he would have a total of 20 gemstones.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Bobby climbs 9 steps to reach the top of the jungle gym. He then slides down a slide that is 6 steps longer than his initial climb. How long is the slide?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the length of the slide given the information about Bobby's climb and the slide being longer than his initial climb.

Given information:
- Bobby climbs 9 steps to reach the top of the jungle gym.
- The slide is 6 steps longer than his initial climb.

Step 1: Find the length of the slide.
Length of the slide = Length of Bobby's initial climb + Additional steps of the slide
Length of the slide = 9 steps + 6 steps
Length of the slide = 15 steps

Therefore, the slide is 15 steps long.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After sliding down, Bobby decides to go back up again. This time, he chooses a ladder that is 2 steps longer than the slide he just took. How long is this ladder?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the length of the ladder given that it is 2 steps longer than the slide.

Given information:
- The slide is 15 steps long (from the previous problem).
- The ladder is 2 steps longer than the slide.

Step 1: Find the length of the ladder.
Length of the ladder = Length of the slide + Additional steps of the ladder
Length of the ladder = 15 steps + 2 steps
Length of the ladder = 17 steps

Therefore, the ladder is 17 steps long.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose Bobby decides to start again from the beginning, but this time, he climbs 14 steps to reach the top of the jungle gym instead of the original 9 steps. He again slides down a slide that is 6 steps longer than his new initial climb. How long is the slide this time?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the new information.

Given information:
- Bobby climbs 14 steps to reach the top of the jungle gym.
- The slide is 6 steps longer than his new initial climb.

Step 1: Find the length of the slide.
Length of the slide = Length of Bobby's new initial climb + Additional steps of the slide
Length of the slide = 14 steps + 6 steps
Length of the slide = 20 steps

Therefore, with Bobby's new initial climb of 14 steps, the slide is 20 steps long.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Lisa starts with 3 bars of soap in her bathroom. Later, she buys 13 more bars. How many bars of soap does Lisa have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of bars of soap Lisa has after buying 13 more bars.

Given information:
- Lisa starts with 3 bars of soap in her bathroom.
- Lisa buys 13 more bars of soap.

Step 1: Find the total number of bars of soap Lisa has after buying 13 more bars.
Total number of bars of soap = Initial number of bars + Number of bars bought
Total number of bars of soap = 3 + 13
Total number of bars of soap = 16

Therefore, Lisa now has 16 bars of soap.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After having 16 bars of soap, Lisa buys 4 more bars at a sale. How many bars of soap does Lisa have now in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:

Given:
- Lisa initially had 16 bars of soap.
- Lisa bought 4 more bars of soap at a sale.

To find the total number of bars of soap Lisa has now, we need to add the number of bars she already had with the number of bars she bought.

Step 1: Calculate the total number of bars of soap Lisa has now.
Total number of bars of soap = Initial number of bars + Number of bars bought
Total number of bars of soap = 16 + 4
Total number of bars of soap = 20

Therefore, after buying 4 more bars of soap at the sale, Lisa now has a total of 20 bars of soap.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if Lisa originally started with 3 bars of soap instead of 16, and she still bought 9 more bars. How many bars of soap does Lisa have now in this case?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the new information.

Given information:
- Lisa originally started with 3 bars of soap.
- Lisa bought 9 more bars of soap.

Step 1: Find the total number of bars of soap Lisa has after buying 9 more bars.
Total number of bars of soap = Initial number of bars + Number of bars bought
Total number of bars of soap = 3 + 9
Total number of bars of soap = 12

Therefore, with the new information, Lisa now has 12 bars of soap.

### Answer: 12

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Rainbow the unicorn has 4 magical crystal horns. She finds 11 more during her adventure in the mystical forest. How many magical crystal horns does Rainbow have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of magical crystal horns Rainbow initially had to the number of horns she found during her adventure.

Given information:
- Rainbow the unicorn initially had 4 magical crystal horns.
- Rainbow found 11 more magical crystal horns during her adventure in the mystical forest.

Step 1: Find the total number of magical crystal horns Rainbow has now.
Total number of magical crystal horns = Initial number of horns + Number of horns found
Total number of magical crystal horns = 4 + 11
Total number of magical crystal horns = 15

Therefore, Rainbow the unicorn now has 15 magical crystal horns.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose Rainbow the unicorn initially had only 4 magical crystal horns and she only found 6 more horns during her adventure in the mystical forest. How many magical crystal horns would Rainbow have then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the new information.

Given information:
- Rainbow the unicorn initially had 4 magical crystal horns.
- Rainbow found 6 more magical crystal horns during her adventure in the mystical forest.

Step 1: Find the total number of magical crystal horns Rainbow has now.
Total number of magical crystal horns = Initial number of horns + Number of horns found
Total number of magical crystal horns = 4 + 6
Total number of magical crystal horns = 10

Therefore, with the new information, Rainbow the unicorn would have 10 magical crystal horns.

### Answer: 10

Expected answer: 10

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Jamie has 3 dollars in his piggy bank. His older brother gives him 11 more dollars. After some time, he finds 5 more dollars. How much money does Jamie have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the amounts of money Jamie had initially, the amount his brother gave him, and the amount he found later.

Given information:
- Jamie initially had $3 in his piggy bank.
- His older brother gave him $11.
- Jamie later found $5.

Step 1: Add the initial amount and the amount given by his brother.
Initial amount + Amount given by brother = $3 + $11 = $14

Step 2: Add the amount found later to the result from Step 1.
Amount from Step 1 + Amount found = $14 + $5 = $19

Therefore, Jamie has a total of $19 in his piggy bank.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose Jamie originally had 3 dollars in his piggy bank and his older brother gave him 9 dollars instead of 11. After finding another 5 dollars, How much money would Jamie have had in this scenario?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- Jamie originally had $3 in his piggy bank.
- His older brother gave him $9 instead of $11.
- Jamie later found $5.

Step 1: Add the initial amount and the amount given by his brother.
Initial amount + Amount given by brother = $3 + $9 = $12

Step 2: Add the amount found later to the result from Step 1.
Amount from Step 1 + Amount found = $12 + $5 = $17

Therefore, if Jamie's older brother gave him $9 instead of $11, and Jamie found $5 later, he would have a total of $17 in his piggy bank.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A marshmallow making company produces 2 packs of marshmallows each morning and 6 packs in the afternoon. How many packs of marshmallows do they make in a day?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of packs of marshmallows produced in the morning and afternoon.

Given information:
- The company produces 2 packs of marshmallows in the morning.
- The company produces 6 packs of marshmallows in the afternoon.

Step 1: Find the number of packs produced in the morning.
Number of packs produced in the morning = 2 packs

Step 2: Find the number of packs produced in the afternoon.
Number of packs produced in the afternoon = 6 packs

Step 3: Find the total number of packs produced in a day.
Total number of packs produced in a day = Number of packs produced in the morning + Number of packs produced in the afternoon
Total number of packs produced in a day = 2 packs + 6 packs
Total number of packs produced in a day = 8 packs

Therefore, the marshmallow making company produces 8 packs of marshmallows in a day.

### Answer: 8

Expected answer: 8

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In addition to their regular production, the marshmallow making company decides to produce 8 extra packs of marshmallows in the evening. How many packs of marshmallows would they produce daily after this increase in production?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:

Given:
- The company originally produced 2 packs in the morning and 6 packs in the afternoon, which is a total of 8 packs per day.
- They will now produce an additional 8 packs in the evening.

To find the new total daily production, we need to add the original daily production to the additional evening production.

Step 1: Find the original daily production.
Original daily production = Morning production + Afternoon production
Original daily production = 2 packs + 6 packs
Original daily production = 8 packs

Step 2: Find the new total daily production by adding the additional evening production.
New total daily production = Original daily production + Additional evening production
New total daily production = 8 packs + 8 packs
New total daily production = 16 packs

Therefore, after increasing production by 8 extra packs in the evening, the marshmallow making company would produce a total of 16 packs of marshmallows daily.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose the marshmallow company decides to alter their production and now makes 15 packs of marshmallows in the afternoon instead of 6. How many packs of marshmallows do they now make in a day including their morning and afternoon production?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of packs of marshmallows produced in the morning and afternoon with the new afternoon production.

Given information:
- The company produces 2 packs of marshmallows in the morning (unchanged).
- The company now produces 15 packs of marshmallows in the afternoon (instead of 6).

Step 1: Find the number of packs produced in the morning.
Number of packs produced in the morning = 2 packs (unchanged)

Step 2: Find the number of packs produced in the afternoon with the new production.
Number of packs produced in the afternoon = 15 packs

Step 3: Find the total number of packs produced in a day with the new afternoon production.
Total number of packs produced in a day = Number of packs produced in the morning + Number of packs produced in the afternoon
Total number of packs produced in a day = 2 packs + 15 packs
Total number of packs produced in a day = 17 packs

Therefore, with the new afternoon production of 15 packs, the marshmallow making company now produces 17 packs of marshmallows in a day, including their morning and afternoon production.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Fiona has 1 square in her drawing. She draws an additional 13 squares. Later, her brother Kevin adds 6 more squares in the drawing. How many squares are in the drawing in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of squares in the drawing by adding the initial number of squares, the number of squares drawn by Fiona, and the number of squares added by her brother Kevin.

Given information:
- Initially, Fiona has 1 square in her drawing.
- Fiona draws an additional 13 squares.
- Kevin adds 6 more squares to the drawing.

Step 1: Find the total number of squares after Fiona draws the additional 13 squares.
Initial number of squares + Number of squares drawn by Fiona = Total number of squares after Fiona's addition
1 + 13 = 14 squares

Step 2: Find the total number of squares after Kevin adds 6 more squares.
Total number of squares after Fiona's addition + Number of squares added by Kevin = Total number of squares in the drawing
14 + 6 = 20 squares

Therefore, there are 20 squares in the drawing in total.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Let's consider the previous problem, but this time Fiona initially drew only 1 square. She then added 4 more squares. Later, her brother Kevin added 6 more squares to the drawing. How many squares are in the drawing now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- Initially, Fiona drew 1 square.
- Fiona added 4 more squares to the drawing.
- Kevin added 6 more squares to the drawing.

Step 1: Find the total number of squares after Fiona added 4 more squares.
Initial number of squares + Number of squares added by Fiona = Total number of squares after Fiona's addition
1 + 4 = 5 squares

Step 2: Find the total number of squares after Kevin added 6 more squares.
Total number of squares after Fiona's addition + Number of squares added by Kevin = Total number of squares in the drawing
5 + 6 = 11 squares

Therefore, there are 11 squares in the drawing now.

### Answer: 11

Expected answer: 11

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Ella the monkey has 3 bananas and she finds 13 more bananas in the jungle. How many bananas does Ella have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of bananas Ella initially had with the number of bananas she found in the jungle.

Given information:
- Ella the monkey initially had 3 bananas.
- Ella found 13 more bananas in the jungle.

Step 1: Add the number of bananas Ella initially had with the number of bananas she found in the jungle.
Number of bananas Ella initially had + Number of bananas she found in the jungle = Total number of bananas Ella has now
3 + 13 = 16

Therefore, Ella the monkey now has 16 bananas.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose Ella the monkey originally had 6 bananas before she found 13 more in the jungle. How many bananas would Ella have in total in that case?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- Ella the monkey originally had 6 bananas.
- Ella found 13 more bananas in the jungle.

To find the total number of bananas Ella has, we need to add the number of bananas she originally had with the number of bananas she found in the jungle.

Step 1: Add the number of bananas Ella originally had with the number of bananas she found in the jungle.
Number of bananas Ella originally had + Number of bananas she found in the jungle = Total number of bananas Ella has now
6 + 13 = 19

Therefore, if Ella the monkey originally had 6 bananas before she found 13 more in the jungle, she would have a total of 19 bananas.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Marie has 8 ice skates in her collection already. She receives 7 more from a sports fair yesterday. How many ice skates does Marie have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of ice skates Marie has after receiving the additional 7 ice skates from the sports fair.

Given information:
- Marie initially had 8 ice skates in her collection.
- She received 7 more ice skates from the sports fair.

To find the total number of ice skates, we need to add the number of ice skates she initially had and the number of ice skates she received.

Total number of ice skates = Initial number of ice skates + Number of ice skates received
Total number of ice skates = 8 + 7
Total number of ice skates = 15

Therefore, Marie now has 15 ice skates in her collection.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After Marie added the 7 skates from the sports fair to her collection, she received 3 more skates as a gift the next day. How many ice skates does Marie have in total after receiving the gift?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of ice skates Marie has after receiving the additional 3 ice skates as a gift.

Given information:
- Marie initially had 8 ice skates in her collection.
- She received 7 more ice skates from the sports fair.
- After that, she received 3 more ice skates as a gift.

Step 1: Find the total number of ice skates after receiving the 7 ice skates from the sports fair.
Total number of ice skates after the sports fair = Initial number of ice skates + Number of ice skates received from the sports fair
Total number of ice skates after the sports fair = 8 + 7 = 15

Step 2: Find the total number of ice skates after receiving the 3 ice skates as a gift.
Total number of ice skates after the gift = Total number of ice skates after the sports fair + Number of ice skates received as a gift
Total number of ice skates after the gift = 15 + 3 = 18

Therefore, Marie has a total of 18 ice skates in her collection after receiving the gift.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Emily originally has 6 stuffed animals. She then receives 14 more after her birthday party. How many stuffed animals does Emily have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of stuffed animals Emily has after receiving the additional ones from her birthday party.

Given information:
- Emily originally has 6 stuffed animals.
- She receives 14 more stuffed animals after her birthday party.

To find the total number of stuffed animals, we need to add the original number of stuffed animals to the number of new stuffed animals she received.

Total number of stuffed animals = Original number of stuffed animals + Number of new stuffed animals
Total number of stuffed animals = 6 + 14
Total number of stuffed animals = 20

Therefore, Emily now has 20 stuffed animals.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: John has 1 tube of toothpaste at home. During a shopping trip, he buys more 19 tubes to stock up his supply. How many toothpaste tubes does John have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of toothpaste tubes John has after buying 19 more tubes.

Given information:
- John initially has 1 tube of toothpaste at home.
- John buys 19 more tubes during a shopping trip.

Step 1: Find the total number of toothpaste tubes John has after buying 19 more tubes.
Total number of toothpaste tubes = Initial number of tubes + Number of tubes bought
Total number of toothpaste tubes = 1 + 19
Total number of toothpaste tubes = 20

Therefore, John now has 20 toothpaste tubes.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose John actually had 1 tube of toothpaste at home and during the shopping trip he bought 18 tubes instead of 19 to stock up his supply. Now, how many toothpaste tubes does John have?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the updated information.

Given information:
- John initially has 1 tube of toothpaste at home.
- John buys 18 tubes during a shopping trip.

Step 1: Find the total number of toothpaste tubes John has after buying 18 tubes.
Total number of toothpaste tubes = Initial number of tubes + Number of tubes bought
Total number of toothpaste tubes = 1 + 18
Total number of toothpaste tubes = 19

Therefore, with the updated information, John now has 19 toothpaste tubes.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: John has 13 apples initially. He then visits the grocery store where he buys 3 more apples. How many apples does he have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of apples John had initially and the number of apples he bought at the grocery store.

Given information:
- John had 13 apples initially.
- John bought 3 more apples at the grocery store.

Step 1: Add the number of apples John had initially and the number of apples he bought.
Number of apples John has in total = Number of apples initially + Number of apples bought
Number of apples John has in total = 13 + 3
Number of apples John has in total = 16

Therefore, John has 16 apples in total now.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: John had originally bought 8 apples instead of 13. He still goes to the grocery store and buys 3 more apples. How many apples does he have now in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- John had 8 apples initially.
- John bought 3 more apples at the grocery store.

Step 1: Add the number of apples John had initially and the number of apples he bought.
Number of apples John has in total = Number of apples initially + Number of apples bought
Number of apples John has in total = 8 + 3
Number of apples John has in total = 11

Therefore, with the updated information, John has 11 apples in total now.

### Answer: 11

Expected answer: 11

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Isha initially had 1 ring. On her birthday, her friends gifted her 14 more rings. How many rings does she have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of rings Isha has after receiving the gifts from her friends.

Given information:
- Isha initially had 1 ring.
- Isha's friends gifted her 14 more rings on her birthday.

To find the total number of rings, we need to add the number of rings she initially had and the number of rings she received as gifts.

Total number of rings = Initial number of rings + Number of rings received as gifts
Total number of rings = 1 + 14
Total number of rings = 15

Therefore, Isha now has 15 rings.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Following her birthday, Isha goes to a charity sale and decides to buy 2 more rings to add to her collection. How many rings does she now have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of rings Isha has after buying 2 more rings at the charity sale.

Given information:
- After her birthday, Isha had 15 rings.
- Isha bought 2 more rings at the charity sale.

To find the total number of rings, we need to add the number of rings she had after her birthday and the number of rings she bought at the charity sale.

Total number of rings = Number of rings after birthday + Number of rings bought at charity sale
Total number of rings = 15 + 2
Total number of rings = 17

Therefore, Isha now has a total of 17 rings in her collection.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Tommy has 3 lemons. He goes to the market and buys 7 more. After that, he decides to buy the same amount of lemons he has now. How many lemons will Tommy have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of lemons Tommy will have after buying the same amount of lemons he has after his second purchase.

Given information:
- Tommy initially has 3 lemons.
- Tommy buys 7 more lemons at the market.
- Tommy decides to buy the same amount of lemons he has after his second purchase.

Step 1: Find the number of lemons Tommy has after buying 7 more lemons.
Number of lemons after the second purchase = Initial number of lemons + Number of lemons bought
Number of lemons after the second purchase = 3 + 7 = 10 lemons

Step 2: Find the number of lemons Tommy will buy in his third purchase.
Number of lemons to be bought in the third purchase = Number of lemons after the second purchase
Number of lemons to be bought in the third purchase = 10 lemons

Step 3: Find the total number of lemons Tommy will have after the third purchase.
Total number of lemons = Number of lemons after the second purchase + Number of lemons bought in the third purchase
Total number of lemons = 10 + 10 = 20 lemons

Therefore, Tommy will have a total of 20 lemons after his third purchase.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: At a campfire night, Harry finds 1 stick suitable for marshmallow roasting. Later, Patricia finds 19 more sticks. How many sticks in total do they have for marshmallow roasting?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of sticks found by Harry and Patricia.

Given information:
- Harry found 1 stick.
- Patricia found 19 more sticks.

Step 1: Find the total number of sticks by adding the sticks found by Harry and Patricia.
Total number of sticks = Sticks found by Harry + Sticks found by Patricia
Total number of sticks = 1 + 19
Total number of sticks = 20

Therefore, Harry and Patricia have a total of 20 sticks for marshmallow roasting.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous problem, Harry initially found 1 stick at the campfire night. But what if Harry had actually found 19 sticks and Patricia had only found 1 stick? How many sticks in total would they have for marshmallow roasting then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's reconsider the problem with the new information.

Given information:
- Harry found 19 sticks.
- Patricia found 1 stick.

To find the total number of sticks, we need to add the sticks found by Harry and Patricia.

Step 1: Find the total number of sticks by adding the sticks found by Harry and Patricia.
Total number of sticks = Sticks found by Harry + Sticks found by Patricia
Total number of sticks = 19 + 1
Total number of sticks = 20

Therefore, if Harry found 19 sticks and Patricia found 1 stick, they would have a total of 20 sticks for marshmallow roasting.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Gary likes to count the windows in his neighborhood. One day, he saw 1 window in a small house. The next day, he saw an additional 19 windows in a big house. How many windows did Gary count in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of windows Gary counted by adding the number of windows in the small house and the number of windows in the big house.

Given information:
- Gary saw 1 window in a small house.
- Gary saw an additional 19 windows in a big house.

Step 1: Find the total number of windows Gary counted.
Total number of windows = Number of windows in the small house + Number of windows in the big house
Total number of windows = 1 + 19
Total number of windows = 20

Therefore, Gary counted a total of 20 windows in his neighborhood.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: On Monday, Tom saw 1 UFO. On Tuesday, he saw 12 more. Then on Wednesday, he spotted another 7. How many UFOs has Tom seen in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of UFOs Tom saw on each day.

Given information:
- On Monday, Tom saw 1 UFO.
- On Tuesday, he saw 12 more UFOs.
- On Wednesday, he spotted another 7 UFOs.

Step 1: Find the total number of UFOs Tom saw on Tuesday.
Number of UFOs seen on Tuesday = Number of UFOs seen on Monday + 12
Number of UFOs seen on Tuesday = 1 + 12 = 13

Step 2: Find the total number of UFOs Tom saw on Wednesday.
Number of UFOs seen on Wednesday = Number of UFOs seen on Tuesday + 7
Number of UFOs seen on Wednesday = 13 + 7 = 20

Therefore, the total number of UFOs Tom has seen in total is 20.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead that on Monday, Tom only spotted 1 UFO, and on Tuesday, he saw 5 more, instead of 12. If he still saw an additional 7 on Wednesday, how many UFOs has Tom seen now in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the new information.

Given information:
- On Monday, Tom saw 1 UFO.
- On Tuesday, he saw 5 more UFOs (instead of 12).
- On Wednesday, he spotted another 7 UFOs.

Step 1: Find the total number of UFOs Tom saw on Tuesday.
Number of UFOs seen on Tuesday = Number of UFOs seen on Monday + 5
Number of UFOs seen on Tuesday = 1 + 5 = 6

Step 2: Find the total number of UFOs Tom saw on Wednesday.
Number of UFOs seen on Wednesday = Number of UFOs seen on Tuesday + 7
Number of UFOs seen on Wednesday = 6 + 7 = 13

Therefore, with the new information, the total number of UFOs Tom has seen in total is 13.

### Answer: 13

Expected answer: 13

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Ben owns 4 cars. He then buys 14 more cars for his collection. How many cars does Ben have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of cars Ben has after buying 14 more cars.

Given information:
- Ben initially owns 4 cars.
- Ben buys 14 more cars.

Step 1: Find the total number of cars Ben has after buying the additional cars.
Total number of cars = Initial number of cars + Number of cars bought
Total number of cars = 4 + 14
Total number of cars = 18

Therefore, Ben now has 18 cars in his collection.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After Ben expanded his collection with additional 14 cars, he receives another car as a gift from his friend. Now, how many cars does Ben have altogether in his collection?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:

Given:
- Initially, Ben had 4 cars.
- He bought 14 more cars, so he had 4 + 14 = 18 cars.
- He received another car as a gift from his friend.

To find the total number of cars Ben has now, we need to add the gifted car to the existing number of cars.

Step 1: Calculate the number of cars Ben had after buying 14 more cars.
Number of cars after buying 14 more = 4 + 14 = 18 cars

Step 2: Add the gifted car to the existing number of cars.
Total number of cars = Number of cars after buying 14 more + Gifted car
Total number of cars = 18 + 1 = 19 cars

Therefore, after receiving the gifted car from his friend, Ben now has a total of 19 cars in his collection.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: John owns 14 jackets. His friend gives him an additional 4 jackets as a gift. How many jackets does John have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of jackets John has after receiving the gift from his friend.

Given information:
- John initially owns 14 jackets.
- John's friend gives him 4 additional jackets as a gift.

To find the total number of jackets John has now, we need to add the number of jackets he initially had and the number of jackets he received as a gift.

Total number of jackets = Initial number of jackets + Number of jackets received as a gift
Total number of jackets = 14 + 4
Total number of jackets = 18

Therefore, John now has 18 jackets.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After receiving the additional jackets, John also found an old jacket in his closet adding 1 more to his collection. How many jackets does John have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's update the information:

* Initially, John had 14 jackets
* He received 4 jackets as a gift from his friend
* He found 1 old jacket in his closet

To find the total number of jackets John has now, we need to add the initial number of jackets, the number of jackets received as a gift, and the number of old jackets found in the closet.

Total number of jackets = Initial number of jackets + Number of jackets received as a gift + Number of old jackets found
Total number of jackets = 14 + 4 + 1
Total number of jackets = 19

Therefore, after finding the old jacket in his closet, John now has a total of 19 jackets.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead, John originally had 12 jackets before his friend gave him the additional 4. How many jackets does John have under this new assumption?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the new assumption.

Given information:
- John initially had 12 jackets.
- John's friend gave him 4 additional jackets as a gift.

To find the total number of jackets John has now, we need to add the number of jackets he initially had and the number of jackets he received as a gift.

Total number of jackets = Initial number of jackets + Number of jackets received as a gift
Total number of jackets = 12 + 4
Total number of jackets = 16

Therefore, with the new assumption that John initially had 12 jackets, and his friend gave him 4 additional jackets, John now has 16 jackets.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Frank has 9 bicycles in his garage. His friend Henry later brings over 5 more bicycles. How many bicycles are in Frank's garage now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of bicycles in Frank's garage after Henry brings over 5 more bicycles.

Given information:
- Frank initially has 9 bicycles in his garage.
- Henry brings over 5 more bicycles.

Step 1: Find the total number of bicycles after Henry brings over 5 more bicycles.
Total number of bicycles = Frank's initial number of bicycles + Number of bicycles brought by Henry
Total number of bicycles = 9 + 5
Total number of bicycles = 14

Therefore, after Henry brings over 5 more bicycles, there are 14 bicycles in Frank's garage.

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Frank has 9 bicycles in his garage. His friend Henry later brings over 5 more bicycles, making the total count in Frank's garage even bigger. Then, a local charity donates 5 more bicycles. How many bicycles are there in Frank's garage now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of bicycles in Frank's garage after Henry brings over 5 more bicycles and the local charity donates 5 more bicycles.

Given information:
- Frank initially has 9 bicycles in his garage.
- Henry brings over 5 more bicycles.
- A local charity donates 5 more bicycles.

Step 1: Find the total number of bicycles after Henry brings over 5 more bicycles.
Total number of bicycles after Henry's addition = Frank's initial number of bicycles + Number of bicycles brought by Henry
Total number of bicycles after Henry's addition = 9 + 5 = 14

Step 2: Find the total number of bicycles after the local charity donates 5 more bicycles.
Total number of bicycles after the charity's donation = Total number of bicycles after Henry's addition + Number of bicycles donated by the charity
Total number of bicycles after the charity's donation = 14 + 5 = 19

Therefore, after Henry brings over 5 more bicycles and the local charity donates 5 more bicycles, there are 19 bicycles in Frank's garage.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the same scenario, suppose Frank originally had only 3 bicycles in his garage instead of 9. His friend Henry still brings over 5 bicycles later. How many bicycles are in Frank's garage now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- Frank initially has 3 bicycles in his garage.
- Henry brings over 5 more bicycles.

Step 1: Find the total number of bicycles after Henry brings over 5 more bicycles.
Total number of bicycles = Frank's initial number of bicycles + Number of bicycles brought by Henry
Total number of bicycles = 3 + 5
Total number of bicycles = 8

Therefore, after Henry brings over 5 more bicycles, there are 8 bicycles in Frank's garage.

### Answer: 8

Expected answer: 8

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Thomas was building a snowman. He used 7 large snowballs for the body and then added 2 smaller ones for the head. How many snowballs did Thomas use in total to build his snowman?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of snowballs Thomas used to build the snowman.

Given information:
- Thomas used 7 large snowballs for the body.
- Thomas used 2 smaller snowballs for the head.

To find the total number of snowballs, we need to add the number of large snowballs and the number of smaller snowballs.

Total number of snowballs = Number of large snowballs + Number of smaller snowballs
Total number of snowballs = 7 + 2
Total number of snowballs = 9

Therefore, Thomas used a total of 9 snowballs to build his snowman.

### Answer: 9

Expected answer: 9

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After Thomas built his snowman with 7 large snowballs and 2 smaller ones, his sister Lucy joined in and added 8 extra decorative snowballs for buttons and facial features. How many snowballs were used in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this problem, we need to find the total number of snowballs used to build the snowman, including the decorative snowballs added by Lucy.

Given information:
- Thomas used 7 large snowballs for the body.
- Thomas used 2 smaller snowballs for the head.
- Lucy added 8 extra decorative snowballs for buttons and facial features.

To find the total number of snowballs, we need to add the number of snowballs used by Thomas and the number of decorative snowballs added by Lucy.

Total number of snowballs = Number of snowballs used by Thomas + Number of decorative snowballs added by Lucy
Total number of snowballs = (7 + 2) + 8
Total number of snowballs = 9 + 8
Total number of snowballs = 17

Therefore, a total of 17 snowballs were used to build the snowman, including the decorative snowballs added by Lucy.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Thomas's sister, Lucy, thought about using 8 large snowballs and 2 smaller ones instead for the body of the snowman she was planning to build. How many snowballs would Lucy need in total to build her version of the snowman?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of snowballs Lucy would need to build her version of the snowman.

Given information:
- Lucy plans to use 8 large snowballs for the body.
- Lucy plans to use 2 smaller snowballs for the head.

To find the total number of snowballs, we need to add the number of large snowballs and the number of smaller snowballs.

Total number of snowballs = Number of large snowballs + Number of smaller snowballs
Total number of snowballs = 8 + 2
Total number of snowballs = 10

Therefore, Lucy would need a total of 10 snowballs to build her version of the snowman.

### Answer: 10

Expected answer: 10

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A firefighter needs to climb a ladder to reach a window. The distance from the ground to the window is 5 feet plus his own height, which is 2 feet. There are additional 11 feet between the window and the people he needs to rescue. How far in total, does the firefighter need to climb?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total distance the firefighter needs to climb, which includes the distance from the ground to the window and the distance between the window and the people he needs to rescue.

Given information:
- The distance from the ground to the window is 5 feet plus the firefighter's height of 2 feet.
- The distance between the window and the people he needs to rescue is 11 feet.

Step 1: Find the distance from the ground to the window.
Distance from the ground to the window = 5 feet + 2 feet (firefighter's height)
Distance from the ground to the window = 7 feet

Step 2: Find the total distance the firefighter needs to climb.
Total distance to climb = Distance from the ground to the window + Distance between the window and the people
Total distance to climb = 7 feet + 11 feet
Total distance to climb = 18 feet

Therefore, the firefighter needs to climb a total distance of 18 feet to reach the people he needs to rescue.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After rescuing the people, the firefighter needs to go an additional distance equal to his own height to get them onto a safe platform. How far in total has the firefighter traveled?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* The firefighter initially climbed a total distance of 18 feet to reach the people (from the previous question)
* After rescuing the people, he needs to go an additional distance equal to his own height (which is 2 feet) to get them onto a safe platform

To find the total distance the firefighter has traveled, we need to add the initial distance climbed (18 feet) and the additional distance to the safe platform (2 feet).

Total distance traveled = Initial distance climbed + Additional distance to safe platform
Total distance traveled = 18 feet + 2 feet
Total distance traveled = 20 feet

Therefore, the total distance the firefighter has traveled after rescuing the people and getting them onto a safe platform is 20 feet.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After reviewing the rescue mission, the firefighter recalls that the distance between the window and the people he needed to rescue was actually 13 feet, not 11 feet. How far in total did the firefighter need to climb considering this new information?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate the total distance the firefighter needs to climb with the updated information.

Given information:
- The distance from the ground to the window is 5 feet plus the firefighter's height of 2 feet.
- The distance between the window and the people he needs to rescue is 13 feet (updated from 11 feet).

Step 1: Find the distance from the ground to the window.
Distance from the ground to the window = 5 feet + 2 feet (firefighter's height)
Distance from the ground to the window = 7 feet

Step 2: Find the total distance the firefighter needs to climb.
Total distance to climb = Distance from the ground to the window + Distance between the window and the people
Total distance to climb = 7 feet + 13 feet
Total distance to climb = 20 feet

Therefore, with the updated information that the distance between the window and the people is 13 feet, the firefighter needs to climb a total distance of 20 feet to reach the people he needs to rescue.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Irina the mouse collected 4 pieces of cheese yesterday. Today, she found 15 more pieces of cheese. How many pieces of cheese has Irina collected in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of pieces of cheese Irina collected yesterday and today.

Given information:
- Irina collected 4 pieces of cheese yesterday.
- Irina found 15 more pieces of cheese today.

Step 1: Find the total number of pieces of cheese Irina has collected.
Total pieces of cheese collected = Pieces collected yesterday + Pieces collected today
Total pieces of cheese collected = 4 + 15
Total pieces of cheese collected = 19

Therefore, Irina has collected a total of 19 pieces of cheese.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose instead, Irina the mouse had collected only 3 pieces of cheese yesterday, but still found 15 pieces today. How many pieces of cheese would Irina have collected in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- Irina collected 3 pieces of cheese yesterday.
- Irina found 15 more pieces of cheese today.

Step 1: Find the total number of pieces of cheese Irina has collected.
Total pieces of cheese collected = Pieces collected yesterday + Pieces collected today
Total pieces of cheese collected = 3 + 15
Total pieces of cheese collected = 18

Therefore, if Irina collected 3 pieces of cheese yesterday and found 15 pieces today, she would have collected a total of 18 pieces of cheese.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Rebecca has 10 dolls initially. Later in the day, her friend Erica comes over to play and brings her own dolls, exactly 6 of them, and additional 2 she got as a gift. How many dolls are they playing with in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of dolls Rebecca and Erica have together.

Given information:
- Rebecca initially has 10 dolls.
- Erica brings 6 of her own dolls.
- Erica also brings 2 additional dolls that she got as a gift.

Step 1: Find the total number of dolls Erica has.
Erica's dolls = Erica's own dolls + Additional dolls she got as a gift
Erica's dolls = 6 + 2 = 8 dolls

Step 2: Find the total number of dolls Rebecca and Erica have together.
Total dolls = Rebecca's initial dolls + Erica's dolls
Total dolls = 10 + 8 = 18 dolls

Therefore, Rebecca and Erica are playing with a total of 18 dolls.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Now, let's imagine Rebecca initially had 12 dolls instead of 10. She still gets joined by Erica, who brings 6 of her own dolls as well as an additional 2 she got as a gift. How many dolls would they have been playing with in total in this scenario?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this scenario, the only change is that Rebecca initially had 12 dolls instead of 10.

Given information:
- Rebecca initially has 12 dolls.
- Erica brings 6 of her own dolls.
- Erica also brings 2 additional dolls that she got as a gift.

Step 1: Find the total number of dolls Erica has.
Erica's dolls = Erica's own dolls + Additional dolls she got as a gift
Erica's dolls = 6 + 2 = 8 dolls

Step 2: Find the total number of dolls Rebecca and Erica have together.
Total dolls = Rebecca's initial dolls + Erica's dolls
Total dolls = 12 + 8 = 20 dolls

Therefore, if Rebecca initially had 12 dolls, they would be playing with a total of 20 dolls.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: There are 4 elephants performing at a circus. After the elephants finish their performance, 1 clown comes into the ring. How many performers have been in the ring?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of performers that have been in the ring.

Given information:
- There are 4 elephants performing at the circus.
- After the elephants finish their performance, 1 clown comes into the ring.

Step 1: Find the number of performers initially in the ring.
Number of performers initially in the ring = Number of elephants
Number of performers initially in the ring = 4

Step 2: Find the number of performers after the clown enters the ring.
Number of performers after the clown enters the ring = Number of performers initially in the ring + Number of clowns
Number of performers after the clown enters the ring = 4 + 1 = 5

Therefore, a total of 5 performers have been in the ring.

### Answer: 5

Expected answer: 5

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the clown's performance, a group of 13 jugglers enter the ring. How many performers have been in the ring in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of performers that have been in the ring, including the elephants, the clown, and the jugglers.

Given information:
- There were 4 elephants performing initially.
- After the elephants finished, 1 clown entered the ring.
- After the clown's performance, a group of 13 jugglers entered the ring.

Step 1: Find the number of performers after the clown entered the ring.
Number of performers after the clown entered the ring = Number of elephants + Number of clowns
Number of performers after the clown entered the ring = 4 + 1 = 5

Step 2: Find the total number of performers after the jugglers entered the ring.
Total number of performers = Number of performers after the clown entered the ring + Number of jugglers
Total number of performers = 5 + 13 = 18

Therefore, a total of 18 performers have been in the ring.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Jeremy has 5 bottles of milk in his fridge. His mother goes grocery shopping and buys an additional 11 bottles of milk. How many bottles of milk does he have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of bottles of milk Jeremy has after his mother buys additional bottles.

Given information:
- Jeremy initially has 5 bottles of milk in his fridge.
- Jeremy's mother buys 11 additional bottles of milk.

To find the total number of bottles, we need to add the initial number of bottles to the number of bottles bought.

Total number of bottles = Initial number of bottles + Number of bottles bought
Total number of bottles = 5 + 11
Total number of bottles = 16

Therefore, Jeremy now has 16 bottles of milk.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After his mother's grocery shopping, Jeremy's friend visits and brings over 3 more bottles of milk. Now, how many bottles of milk does Jeremy have?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's take this step-by-step:
* Initially, Jeremy had 5 bottles of milk
* His mother bought 11 more bottles
* So after his mother's shopping, he had 5 + 11 = 16 bottles
* Then his friend brought over 3 more bottles
* So the new total is the previous total (16) plus the 3 bottles his friend brought
* 16 + 3 = 19

Therefore, after his friend's visit, Jeremy now has 19 bottles of milk.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In the park, Liam finds 2 new species of butterflies and 3 new species of birds. He then discovers as many new insect species as the total number of bird and butterfly species combined. Later in the day, he encounters 10 more unique species. How many total species did Liam discover during his day at the park?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of new insect species Liam discovered and then add it to the number of butterfly and bird species, and finally add the 10 more unique species he encountered later.

Given information:
- Liam found 2 new species of butterflies.
- Liam found 3 new species of birds.
- Liam discovered as many new insect species as the total number of bird and butterfly species combined.
- Liam encountered 10 more unique species later in the day.

Step 1: Find the total number of bird and butterfly species.
Total number of bird and butterfly species = 2 (butterflies) + 3 (birds) = 5 species

Step 2: Find the number of new insect species Liam discovered.
Number of new insect species = Total number of bird and butterfly species = 5 species

Step 3: Find the total number of species Liam discovered before encountering the 10 more unique species.
Total species before the 10 more unique species = Number of butterfly species + Number of bird species + Number of insect species
Total species before the 10 more unique species = 2 + 3 + 5 = 10 species

Step 4: Find the total number of species Liam discovered during his day at the park.
Total species discovered = Total species before the 10 more unique species + 10 more unique species
Total species discovered = 10 + 10 = 20 species

Therefore, Liam discovered a total of 20 species during his day at the park.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In his previous trip to the park, Liam found 2 new species of butterflies and 3 new species of birds. Then he discovered as many insect species as the total number of bird and butterfly species combined. The very next day, he encountered only 4 more unique species instead of 10 that he found on the previous day. How many total species did Liam discover during his second day at the park?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the number of new insect species Liam discovered on his previous trip and then add it to the number of butterfly and bird species, and finally add the 4 more unique species he encountered on the second day.

Given information:
- On the previous trip, Liam found 2 new species of butterflies.
- On the previous trip, Liam found 3 new species of birds.
- On the previous trip, Liam discovered as many new insect species as the total number of bird and butterfly species combined.
- On the second day, Liam encountered 4 more unique species.

Step 1: Find the total number of bird and butterfly species on the previous trip.
Total number of bird and butterfly species = 2 (butterflies) + 3 (birds) = 5 species

Step 2: Find the number of new insect species Liam discovered on the previous trip.
Number of new insect species = Total number of bird and butterfly species = 5 species

Step 3: Find the total number of species Liam discovered on the previous trip.
Total species on the previous trip = Number of butterfly species + Number of bird species + Number of insect species
Total species on the previous trip = 2 + 3 + 5 = 10 species

Step 4: Find the total number of species Liam discovered during his second day at the park.
Total species discovered on the second day = Total species on the previous trip + 4 more unique species
Total species discovered on the second day = 10 + 4 = 14 species

Therefore, Liam discovered a total of 14 species during his second day at the park.

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Maria has 8 piano sheets. After her piano lesson, her instructor gives her 10 more. How many piano sheets does Maria have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of piano sheets Maria has after receiving the additional 10 sheets from her instructor.

Given information:
- Maria initially has 8 piano sheets.
- Her instructor gives her 10 more piano sheets.

To find the total number of piano sheets, we need to add the initial number of sheets and the additional sheets.

Total number of piano sheets = Initial number of sheets + Additional sheets
Total number of piano sheets = 8 + 10
Total number of piano sheets = 18

Therefore, after receiving the additional 10 piano sheets from her instructor, Maria now has 18 piano sheets.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Previously, Maria began with 8 piano sheets. But what if she had only started with 8 and her instructor then gave her 11 more instead of the previous 10? How many piano sheets would Maria have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the new information.

Given information:
- Maria initially had 8 piano sheets.
- Her instructor gave her 11 more piano sheets.

To find the total number of piano sheets, we need to add the initial number of sheets and the additional sheets.

Total number of piano sheets = Initial number of sheets + Additional sheets
Total number of piano sheets = 8 + 11
Total number of piano sheets = 19

Therefore, if Maria started with 8 piano sheets and her instructor gave her 11 more, she would now have 19 piano sheets.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: On planet Zorg, Quep has 4 lazer guns. He finds a treasure chest and inside, he discovers an additional 13 lazer guns. How many lazer guns does Quep have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of lazer guns Quep has after finding the treasure chest.

Given information:
- Quep initially had 4 lazer guns.
- Quep found 13 additional lazer guns in the treasure chest.

To find the total number of lazer guns, we need to add the number of lazer guns Quep initially had and the number of lazer guns he found in the treasure chest.

Total number of lazer guns = Initial number of lazer guns + Number of lazer guns found in the treasure chest
Total number of lazer guns = 4 + 13
Total number of lazer guns = 17

Therefore, Quep now has 17 lazer guns.

### Answer: 17

Expected answer: 17

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if instead, Quep initially only had 4 lazer guns before he found the treasure chest? After finding the treasure chest, which still contains 4 lazer guns, how many lazer guns does Quep have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's revisit the problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- Quep initially had 4 lazer guns.
- Quep found a treasure chest containing 4 additional lazer guns.

To find the total number of lazer guns Quep has now, we need to add the number of lazer guns he initially had and the number of lazer guns he found in the treasure chest.

Total number of lazer guns = Initial number of lazer guns + Number of lazer guns found in the treasure chest
Total number of lazer guns = 4 + 4
Total number of lazer guns = 8

Therefore, after finding the treasure chest containing 4 additional lazer guns, Quep now has a total of 8 lazer guns.

### Answer: 8

Expected answer: 8

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Frankie the elephant has 1 apple. He finds 2 more apples. Suddenly, a friendly squirrel brings him a present of 11 more apples. How many apples does Frankie the elephant have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of apples Frankie the elephant has after receiving the additional apples.

Given information:
- Frankie the elephant initially has 1 apple.
- He finds 2 more apples.
- A friendly squirrel brings him a present of 11 more apples.

Step 1: Find the number of apples Frankie has after finding the 2 additional apples.
Number of apples after finding 2 more = Initial number of apples + 2 additional apples
Number of apples after finding 2 more = 1 + 2 = 3 apples

Step 2: Find the total number of apples Frankie has after receiving the present from the squirrel.
Total number of apples = Number of apples after finding 2 more + Number of apples received from the squirrel
Total number of apples = 3 + 11 = 14 apples

Therefore, Frankie the elephant now has 14 apples.

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Suppose initially Frankie the elephant only had 1 apple, and he found 2 more apples. After that, he went to the river and found one more apple. How many apples does Frankie the elephant have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of apples Frankie the elephant has after finding additional apples.

Given information:
- Frankie the elephant initially had 1 apple.
- He found 2 more apples.
- After that, he went to the river and found 1 more apple.

Step 1: Find the number of apples Frankie has after finding the initial 2 additional apples.
Number of apples after finding 2 more = Initial number of apples + 2 additional apples
Number of apples after finding 2 more = 1 + 2 = 3 apples

Step 2: Find the total number of apples Frankie has after finding the additional apple at the river.
Total number of apples = Number of apples after finding 2 more + Number of apples found at the river
Total number of apples = 3 + 1 = 4 apples

Therefore, Frankie the elephant now has 4 apples.

### Answer: 4

Expected answer: 4

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: There was 1 inch of snow on the ground in the morning. By noon, another inch of snow had fallen. How many inches of snow were there in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the initial amount of snow on the ground to the additional amount of snow that fell by noon.

Given information:
- There was 1 inch of snow on the ground in the morning.
- By noon, another inch of snow had fallen.

Step 1: Find the initial amount of snow on the ground.
Initial amount of snow = 1 inch

Step 2: Find the additional amount of snow that fell by noon.
Additional amount of snow = 1 inch

Step 3: Find the total amount of snow by adding the initial amount and the additional amount.
Total amount of snow = Initial amount of snow + Additional amount of snow
Total amount of snow = 1 inch + 1 inch
Total amount of snow = 2 inches

Therefore, there were 2 inches of snow in total.

### Answer: 2

Expected answer: 2

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the previous snowfall, an additional 13 inches of snow fell in the afternoon. How many inches of snow were there in total by the end of the day?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the total amount of snow from the morning and noon to the additional amount of snow that fell in the afternoon.

Given information:
- There were 2 inches of snow in total by noon.
- An additional 13 inches of snow fell in the afternoon.

Step 1: Find the total amount of snow by noon.
Total amount of snow by noon = 2 inches

Step 2: Find the additional amount of snow that fell in the afternoon.
Additional amount of snow in the afternoon = 13 inches

Step 3: Find the total amount of snow by the end of the day by adding the amount of snow by noon and the additional amount of snow in the afternoon.
Total amount of snow by the end of the day = Total amount of snow by noon + Additional amount of snow in the afternoon
Total amount of snow by the end of the day = 2 inches + 13 inches
Total amount of snow by the end of the day = 15 inches

Therefore, there were 15 inches of snow in total by the end of the day.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Instead of 1 inch of morning snowfall, suppose there were 12 inches of snowfall that morning. How many inches of snow were there in total then by the noontime?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- There were 12 inches of snow on the ground in the morning.
- By noon, another inch of snow had fallen.

Step 1: Find the initial amount of snow on the ground.
Initial amount of snow = 12 inches

Step 2: Find the additional amount of snow that fell by noon.
Additional amount of snow = 1 inch

Step 3: Find the total amount of snow by adding the initial amount and the additional amount.
Total amount of snow = Initial amount of snow + Additional amount of snow
Total amount of snow = 12 inches + 1 inch
Total amount of snow = 13 inches

Therefore, there were 13 inches of snow in total by noontime.

### Answer: 13

Expected answer: 13

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Mike has 19 playing cards in his collection. He then finds one more card on the ground. How many cards does Mike have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of cards Mike initially had to the number of cards he found on the ground.

Given information:
- Mike has 19 playing cards in his collection.
- Mike finds one more card on the ground.

Step 1: Find the number of cards Mike found on the ground.
Number of cards found on the ground = 1

Step 2: Find the total number of cards Mike has now.
Total number of cards = Initial number of cards + Number of cards found on the ground
Total number of cards = 19 + 1
Total number of cards = 20

Therefore, Mike now has 20 cards in his collection.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous case, Mike had 19 playing cards in his collection. But what if he initially only had 2 playing cards and then found one more? How many cards would Mike have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this new problem.

Given information:
- Mike initially had 2 playing cards in his collection.
- Mike found one more card on the ground.

Step 1: Find the number of cards Mike found on the ground.
Number of cards found on the ground = 1

Step 2: Find the total number of cards Mike has now.
Total number of cards = Initial number of cards + Number of cards found on the ground
Total number of cards = 2 + 1
Total number of cards = 3

Therefore, if Mike initially had 2 playing cards and then found one more card on the ground, he would now have 3 cards in his collection.

### Answer: 3

Expected answer: 3

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A gust of wind blew 1 leaf off a tree, followed by another 2 leaves. How many leaves did the wind blow off the tree in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of leaves blown off the tree in each instance.

Given information:
- The first gust of wind blew off 1 leaf.
- The second gust of wind blew off 2 leaves.

Step 1: Find the total number of leaves blown off the tree.
Total leaves blown off = Leaves blown off in the first gust + Leaves blown off in the second gust
Total leaves blown off = 1 + 2
Total leaves blown off = 3

Therefore, the wind blew off a total of 3 leaves from the tree.

### Answer: 3

Expected answer: 3

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After the gust of wind blew 1 leaf followed by another 2 leaves off the tree, an even stronger gust blew an additional 9 leaves off. How many leaves in total did the wind blow off the tree now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* First gust of wind blew off 1 leaf
* Second gust of wind blew off 2 more leaves
* Third (stronger) gust of wind blew off 9 more leaves

To find the total number of leaves blown off, we need to add up the leaves from each gust:

Leaves blown off in first gust: 1
Leaves blown off in second gust: 2
Leaves blown off in third gust: 9

Total leaves blown off = 1 + 2 + 9
                     = 12

Therefore, the total number of leaves blown off the tree by the wind is 12.

### Answer: 12

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A wizard has 7 potions in his pantry. He spends a whole day brewing and at the end of the day, he has 13 more potions than before. How many potions does he have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of potions the wizard has after brewing for a day.

Given information:
- The wizard initially had 7 potions in his pantry.
- After brewing for a day, he has 13 more potions than before.

Step 1: Find the number of potions the wizard brewed during the day.
Number of potions brewed = 13 (since he has 13 more potions than before)

Step 2: Find the total number of potions the wizard has now.
Total number of potions = Initial number of potions + Number of potions brewed
Total number of potions = 7 + 13
Total number of potions = 20

Therefore, the wizard now has 20 potions in his pantry.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In the previous situation, the wizard originally had 7 potions before he started brewing. But what if the wizard only had 3 potions to start with instead? After brewing the same amount, how many potions would he have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this case, the wizard originally had 3 potions before he started brewing.

Given information:
- The wizard initially had 3 potions in his pantry.
- After brewing for a day, he has 13 more potions than before.

Step 1: Find the number of potions the wizard brewed during the day.
Number of potions brewed = 13 (since he has 13 more potions than before)

Step 2: Find the total number of potions the wizard has now.
Total number of potions = Initial number of potions + Number of potions brewed
Total number of potions = 3 + 13
Total number of potions = 16

Therefore, if the wizard had only 3 potions initially and brewed the same amount (13 more potions), he would now have 16 potions in his pantry.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: In a zoo, 11 tigers live in the north area and 5 more live in the south area. How many tigers are in the zoo in all?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of tigers in the zoo by adding the number of tigers in the north area and the south area.

Given information:
- There are 11 tigers in the north area.
- There are 5 more tigers in the south area.

Step 1: Find the number of tigers in the south area.
Number of tigers in the south area = 5

Step 2: Find the total number of tigers in the zoo.
Total number of tigers = Number of tigers in the north area + Number of tigers in the south area
Total number of tigers = 11 + 5
Total number of tigers = 16

Therefore, there are 16 tigers in the zoo in total.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: George has 2 gallons of paint. Larry gives him an additional amount of paint that is equivalent to what George originally had. George then buys 4 more gallons of paint. How many gallons of paint does he now have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total amount of paint George has after receiving the additional paint from Larry and buying 4 more gallons.

Given information:
- George initially had 2 gallons of paint.
- Larry gave George an additional amount of paint equal to what George originally had, which is 2 gallons.
- George then bought 4 more gallons of paint.

Step 1: Find the amount of paint George had after receiving the additional paint from Larry.
George's initial amount of paint + Additional paint from Larry = Total amount of paint after receiving additional paint
2 gallons + 2 gallons = 4 gallons

Step 2: Find the total amount of paint George has after buying 4 more gallons.
Total amount of paint after receiving additional paint + Amount of paint bought = Total amount of paint
4 gallons + 4 gallons = 8 gallons

Therefore, George now has a total of 8 gallons of paint.

### Answer: 8

Expected answer: 8

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: George's cousin Hank came over and saw his painting project. Impressed, Hank decides to contribute and gives George 11 more gallons of paint. How many gallons of paint does George have now in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total amount of paint George has after receiving the additional 11 gallons from his cousin Hank.

Given information:
- George initially had 8 gallons of paint (from the previous problem).
- Hank gave George an additional 11 gallons of paint.

Step 1: Find the total amount of paint George has after receiving the additional 11 gallons from Hank.
George's initial amount of paint + Additional paint from Hank = Total amount of paint
8 gallons + 11 gallons = 19 gallons

Therefore, George now has a total of 19 gallons of paint after receiving the additional 11 gallons from his cousin Hank.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if initially, George only had 2 gallons of paint and Larry gave George an additional amount of paint equivalent to what George originally had. Then, George decided to buy 7 more gallons instead of 4. How many gallons of paint would George have in total then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the updated information.

Given information:
- George initially had 2 gallons of paint.
- Larry gave George an additional amount of paint equal to what George originally had, which is 2 gallons.
- George then bought 7 more gallons of paint.

Step 1: Find the amount of paint George had after receiving the additional paint from Larry.
George's initial amount of paint + Additional paint from Larry = Total amount of paint after receiving additional paint
2 gallons + 2 gallons = 4 gallons

Step 2: Find the total amount of paint George has after buying 7 more gallons.
Total amount of paint after receiving additional paint + Amount of paint bought = Total amount of paint
4 gallons + 7 gallons = 11 gallons

Therefore, with the updated information, George now has a total of 11 gallons of paint.

### Answer: 11

Expected answer: 11

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Sarah has 5 earrings, and she just bought 9 more earrings from a store. How many earrings does she have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of earrings Sarah has after buying the new ones.

Given information:
- Sarah initially had 5 earrings.
- Sarah bought 9 more earrings from the store.

To find the total number of earrings, we need to add the number of earrings she initially had and the number of earrings she bought.

Total number of earrings = Initial number of earrings + Number of earrings bought
Total number of earrings = 5 + 9
Total number of earrings = 14

Therefore, Sarah now has 14 earrings.

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After two days, Sarah received 2 more earrings as a gift from her friend. Now, how many earrings does she have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's take this step-by-step:
* Initially, Sarah had 5 earrings
* She bought 9 more earrings from the store
* So after buying the new earrings, she had 5 + 9 = 14 earrings
* Now, she received 2 more earrings as a gift from her friend
* To find the total, we add the earrings she already had (14) to the new earrings she received (2)
* 14 + 2 = 16

Therefore, after receiving the 2 earrings as a gift, Sarah now has a total of 16 earrings.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if Sarah originally had 4 earrings instead of 5 before she bought 9 more from the store? How many earrings would she have then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's recalculate with the new information.

Given information:
- Sarah initially had 4 earrings.
- Sarah bought 9 more earrings from the store.

To find the total number of earrings, we need to add the number of earrings she initially had and the number of earrings she bought.

Total number of earrings = Initial number of earrings + Number of earrings bought
Total number of earrings = 4 + 9
Total number of earrings = 13

Therefore, if Sarah originally had 4 earrings before buying 9 more from the store, she would now have 13 earrings.

### Answer: 13

Expected answer: 13

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Ramesh has 1 tomato and Suresh gives him 1 more. How many tomatoes does Ramesh have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of tomatoes Ramesh has after receiving one more tomato from Suresh.

Given information:
- Ramesh initially has 1 tomato.
- Suresh gives Ramesh 1 more tomato.

Step 1: Find the number of tomatoes Ramesh has initially.
Number of tomatoes Ramesh has initially = 1

Step 2: Find the number of tomatoes Suresh gives to Ramesh.
Number of tomatoes Suresh gives to Ramesh = 1

Step 3: Find the total number of tomatoes Ramesh has now.
Total number of tomatoes Ramesh has now = Number of tomatoes Ramesh has initially + Number of tomatoes Suresh gives to Ramesh
Total number of tomatoes Ramesh has now = 1 + 1 = 2

Therefore, Ramesh has 2 tomatoes now.

### Answer: 2

Expected answer: 2

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: Ramesh's mom gives him 16 more tomatoes. Now how many tomatoes does Ramesh have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this step-by-step:

Given:
- Initially, Ramesh had 2 tomatoes (from the previous question).
- Ramesh's mom gives him 16 more tomatoes.

To find the total number of tomatoes Ramesh has now, we need to add the number of tomatoes he already had to the number of tomatoes his mom gave him.

Step 1: Find the number of tomatoes Ramesh had initially.
Number of tomatoes Ramesh had initially = 2

Step 2: Find the number of tomatoes Ramesh's mom gave him.
Number of tomatoes Ramesh's mom gave him = 16

Step 3: Find the total number of tomatoes Ramesh has now.
Total number of tomatoes Ramesh has now = Number of tomatoes Ramesh had initially + Number of tomatoes Ramesh's mom gave him
Total number of tomatoes Ramesh has now = 2 + 16 = 18

Therefore, Ramesh has a total of 18 tomatoes now.

### Answer: 18

Expected answer: 18

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if, initially, Ramesh started with 4 tomatoes instead of 1 before Suresh gave him 1 more. How many tomatoes would Ramesh have then?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's consider the new scenario where Ramesh initially had 4 tomatoes before Suresh gave him 1 more.

Given information:
- Ramesh initially has 4 tomatoes.
- Suresh gives Ramesh 1 more tomato.

Step 1: Find the number of tomatoes Ramesh has initially.
Number of tomatoes Ramesh has initially = 4

Step 2: Find the number of tomatoes Suresh gives to Ramesh.
Number of tomatoes Suresh gives to Ramesh = 1

Step 3: Find the total number of tomatoes Ramesh has now.
Total number of tomatoes Ramesh has now = Number of tomatoes Ramesh has initially + Number of tomatoes Suresh gives to Ramesh
Total number of tomatoes Ramesh has now = 4 + 1 = 5

Therefore, if Ramesh initially had 4 tomatoes and Suresh gave him 1 more, Ramesh would have 5 tomatoes in total.

### Answer: 5

Expected answer: 5

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: A farmer owns 4 cows. His neighbor gifts him 2 more cows. How many cows does the farmer now have in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of cows the farmer initially had with the number of cows gifted by his neighbor.

Given information:
- The farmer initially had 4 cows.
- The neighbor gifted the farmer 2 more cows.

Step 1: Add the number of cows the farmer initially had with the number of cows gifted by the neighbor.
Number of cows the farmer now has = Initial number of cows + Number of cows gifted
Number of cows the farmer now has = 4 + 2
Number of cows the farmer now has = 6

Therefore, the farmer now has a total of 6 cows.

### Answer: 6

Expected answer: 6

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: What if the farmer originally had 9 cows instead of 4, and his neighbor still gifted him 2 more cows. With these new values, how many cows does the farmer have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the new values.

Given information:
- The farmer originally had 9 cows.
- The neighbor gifted the farmer 2 more cows.

Step 1: Add the number of cows the farmer originally had with the number of cows gifted by the neighbor.
Number of cows the farmer now has = Initial number of cows + Number of cows gifted
Number of cows the farmer now has = 9 + 2
Number of cows the farmer now has = 11

Therefore, with the new values, the farmer now has a total of 11 cows.

### Answer: 11

Expected answer: 11

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Liam baked 4 cookies in the morning, and then he baked 10 more in the evening. How many cookies did Liam bake in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to add the number of cookies Liam baked in the morning and the number of cookies he baked in the evening.

Given information:
- Liam baked 4 cookies in the morning.
- Liam baked 10 more cookies in the evening.

Step 1: Find the total number of cookies Liam baked.
Total number of cookies = Number of cookies baked in the morning + Number of cookies baked in the evening
Total number of cookies = 4 + 10
Total number of cookies = 14

Therefore, Liam baked a total of 14 cookies.

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After baking cookies, Liam decided to bake 2 more as a midnight snack. Now, how many cookies has Liam baked in total?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's take the previous information and add the new detail.

Previously, Liam had baked:
- 4 cookies in the morning
- 10 cookies in the evening
- Total of 14 cookies

Now, Liam baked 2 more cookies as a midnight snack.

To find the new total, we add the 2 new cookies to the previous total:
Previous total: 14 cookies
New cookies baked: 2 cookies
New total = 14 + 2 = 16 cookies

Therefore, after baking the midnight snack cookies, Liam has baked a total of 16 cookies.

### Answer: 16

Expected answer: 16

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Dr. Fusion begins building a rocket with 7 parts. Shortly after, he receives another shipment with 7 more parts. How many parts does he have in total for his rocket now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of parts Dr. Fusion has after receiving the second shipment.

Given information:
- Dr. Fusion initially had 7 parts for building the rocket.
- He received another shipment with 7 more parts.

To find the total number of parts, we need to add the initial number of parts and the number of parts received in the second shipment.

Total number of parts = Initial number of parts + Number of parts received in the second shipment
Total number of parts = 7 + 7
Total number of parts = 14

Therefore, Dr. Fusion has a total of 14 parts for his rocket now.

### Answer: 14

Expected answer: 14

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: After assembling the rocket parts, Dr. Fusion realizes he needs more components and receives an extra 5 parts. Now, how many parts does he have in total for his rocket?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's break this down:
* Initially, Dr. Fusion had 7 parts
* He received another shipment of 7 parts, so he had 7 + 7 = 14 parts
* Now, he receives an extra 5 parts

To find the total number of parts he has now, we need to add the extra 5 parts to the 14 parts he already had:

Total parts = Parts he had before + Extra parts received
Total parts = 14 + 5
Total parts = 19

Therefore, after receiving the extra 5 parts, Dr. Fusion now has a total of 19 parts for his rocket.

### Answer: 19

Expected answer: 19

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: If Dr. Fusion had originally started with 7 rocket parts and added only 5 more parts instead of 7, how many total parts would he have now for his rocket?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

In this problem, we need to find the total number of parts Dr. Fusion would have if he started with 7 rocket parts and added 5 more parts.

Given information:
- Dr. Fusion initially had 7 rocket parts.
- He added 5 more parts.

To find the total number of parts, we need to add the initial number of parts and the number of parts added.

Total number of parts = Initial number of parts + Number of parts added
Total number of parts = 7 + 5
Total number of parts = 12

Therefore, if Dr. Fusion had originally started with 7 rocket parts and added 5 more parts, he would have a total of 12 parts for his rocket now.

### Answer: 12

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Problem

Problem: Timmy has 4 giraffes. He then gets the same amount of giraffes he already had and then adds the amount of giraffes he originally had. How many giraffes does Timmy have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to break it down into steps.

Given information:
- Timmy initially has 4 giraffes.
- He gets the same amount of giraffes he already had.
- He then adds the amount of giraffes he originally had.

Step 1: Find the number of giraffes Timmy gets.
Number of giraffes Timmy gets = Number of giraffes he initially had
Number of giraffes Timmy gets = 4 giraffes

Step 2: Find the total number of giraffes after getting the same amount.
Total number of giraffes = Initial number of giraffes + Number of giraffes he gets
Total number of giraffes = 4 + 4 = 8 giraffes

Step 3: Add the amount of giraffes he originally had to the total.
Final number of giraffes = Total number of giraffes + Initial number of giraffes
Final number of giraffes = 8 + 4 = 12 giraffes

Therefore, Timmy now has 12 giraffes.

### Answer: 12

Expected answer: 12

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In addition to the giraffes, Timmy also has 8 kangaroos. How many animals does Timmy have in total now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

To solve this problem, we need to find the total number of animals Timmy has, which includes both giraffes and kangaroos.

Given information:
- Timmy has 12 giraffes.
- Timmy has 8 kangaroos.

Step 1: Find the total number of animals Timmy has.
Total number of animals = Number of giraffes + Number of kangaroos
Total number of animals = 12 + 8 = 20 animals

Therefore, Timmy has a total of 20 animals, including 12 giraffes and 8 kangaroos.

### Answer: 20

Expected answer: 20

Correct? Yes

πŸ”— Follow-up

Problem: In a different scenario, instead of originally having 4 giraffes, suppose Timmy originally had 5 giraffes. If he then gets the same amount of giraffes he already had, and then adds the amount of giraffes he originally had, how many giraffes does Timmy have now?

Claude-3 Sonnet:

Okay, let's solve this problem with the new information.

Given information:
- Timmy initially has 5 giraffes.
- He gets the same amount of giraffes he already had.
- He then adds the amount of giraffes he originally had.

Step 1: Find the number of giraffes Timmy gets.
Number of giraffes Timmy gets = Number of giraffes he initially had
Number of giraffes Timmy gets = 5 giraffes

Step 2: Find the total number of giraffes after getting the same amount.
Total number of giraffes = Initial number of giraffes + Number of giraffes he gets
Total number of giraffes = 5 + 5 = 10 giraffes

Step 3: Add the amount of giraffes he originally had to the total.
Final number of giraffes = Total number of giraffes + Initial number of giraffes
Final number of giraffes = 10 + 5 = 15 giraffes

Therefore, Timmy now has 15 giraffes.

### Answer: 15

Expected answer: 15

Correct? Yes