Suppose you are racing around a track and they want you to keep track of the number of laps. Every time someone runs a lap you need to write it down.
If you write down the numbers with a pencil you can keep erasing them but will be messy. You could keep crossing out the score, so by the time they have run \(5\) laps it looks like this. \[\not 1\not 2\not 3\not 4 5\]
An easier way is to use tallies. Suppose every time someone ran a lap you drew a line, and every \(5\) laps you drew a diaganol line.
Here is what the tallies \(1\) through \(5\) look like.
\(1 \rightarrow\)
\(2 \rightarrow\)
\(3 \rightarrow\)
\(4 \rightarrow\)
\(5 \rightarrow\)
\(6 \rightarrow\)
By making a diagonal line every \(5\) strokes, you can count the tallies using counting by \(5\)'s. Here is the number \(17\) shown in tallies. It is three \(5\)'s and two \(1\)'s.
Write this tally in Hindu Arabic numerals.
Choose a tally that equals the number.