However, I'm not sure how to approach this question and I'm very new to these types of problems; any help is appreciated.
Dear zak, welcome to PF once more
If you list off a load of equations like you did, I'm afraid they don't mean much to you.
So my first advice is: familiarize yourself with uniform linear motion, find out what the customary variable names mean (x, v, s, t). Then idem with uniformly accelerated linear motion. There are 6 formulas
here and if you grasp numbers 4 and 5 you're well equipped to deal with most of the exercises -- provided your math is OK.
Second advice it to make a sketch: time horizontal, position vertical.
Kid is at x=0m for t=0s and runs 5m/s. Uniform motion, constant speed. So that's a straight line with slope 5 m/s. As you already found out, 30 m takes 6 s.
Truck is at 30 m for t=0s and accelerates with 1 m/s
2. For that you need the equation for uniformly accelerated linear motion (number 5). It starts, so v
0 = 0 m/s. And x
0 = 30 m. A parabola. x = 31 m at t=1s, x = 34m at t=2s, 39m at t=3s etc.
Third advice is to brush up on parabola equations (most of these exercises have to do with parabolas, so you want to be able to solve quadratic equations). But quite often a simplification/short is available for smart or lazy (or both) students.
In this case there's a smart way out too, and in fact you have already found it (in post #5, but do you realize you did ?) : by the time the kid is at 30 m, the truck speed is > kid speed, so he can forget about ever catching up. Nothing to solve. Wait for the next ice truck is all the poor bugger can do
