Depending on the amount of tax charged, another way of estimating the tip is
doubling tax.  In New York, this usually covers the customary 15% .

Gail M. Hayes

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Paul Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, August 08, 2003 10:39 AM
Subject: Tips on Tipping


> As I think the original request was for common behaviors that can be
related
> to psychological topics, I think the question of how one figures a
standard
> tip is also interesting. I see people using little "tip tables" that give
> 15% of various amounts in table form, but without such a table, how one
> represents the problem can make a big difference in problem difficulty.
> We're taught to figure things like this by multiplying the total bill by
> .15, and we're taught to do problems like that using a complicated
> algorithm* that amounts to manipulation of symbols. That algorithm is too
> complicated for most of us to do mentally, without at least writing down
> intermediate answers, something which is often not possible when figuring
a
> tip (due to lack of pencil and paper).
>
> But there are other ways to figure 15% besides that kind of symbol
> manipulation. I usually figure 10% (simply by moving over the decimal
point
> mentally), and then figure (again, mentally) half of that number (which is
> then 5% of the total), and then (yet again mentally) add the two.
> Alternatively, one could figure 10%, and then 20% (simply by doubling the
> 10%) and then figure the halfway mark between those two numbers (I haven't
> used that method, and I don't know if it would be too taxing for me).
>
> I'll bet there are other ways that people use besides these, and I'd think
> they might lead to an interesting discussion of the role of mental
> representation in mathematical problem solving. Most Introductory texts
have
> a chapter on "Language, Thinking, and Problem Solving" where the relevant
> material would be found. I suspect that most of the people who still try
to
> use the symbol manipulation algorithm in the tipping context also believe
> that symbol manipulation method they've been taught IS multiplication, and
> don't realize that it's just one of many devices for finding the answer to
> multiplication problems.
>
> * "Okay, class, remember, start by multiplying the ones column, and write
> your answer below the ones column, carrying any tens you get up to the top
> of the tens column. Then take the tens column from the first multiplicand
> times the ones column from the second..."
>
> Paul Smith
> Alverno College
> Milwaukee
>
>
> ---
> You are currently subscribed to tips as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>



---
You are currently subscribed to tips as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to