Helen bought notebooks and pencils for school. The number of pencils she bought is given by 6(n-3) , where n is the number of notebooks she bought. How many pencils did Helen buy if she bought 5 notebooks?
So the number of pencils bought can be represented by an equation: [tex]P=6(n-3)[/tex], where n is the number of notebooks bought. Since Helen bought 5 notebooks, simply plug 5 into n: [tex]P=6(5-3)=6(2)=12[/tex]. So Helen bought 12 pencils.