You are correct. The method you used is fine, and you could've also used the Henderson-Hasselbach equation. The given Ka is indeed for +NH
3CH
2COOH
+NH
3CH
2COO
- + H
+. What you were supposed to do is realize that there are two acidic groups, the COOH group and the NH
3+ group. You can find the Ka of the amino group (Ka2) using the Kb given. You can see that Ka2 << Ka1, or that pKa2 >> pKa1. Then this amino acid is like a diprotic acid (e.g. acetic acid), where you have two protons that can be dissociated. The first proton (COOH) has to come off before the second proton (NH
3+), which means that the reaction has to be the way you assumed it would be. The only thing is that this assumption isn't really an assumption, it can be shown by the Ka and Kb values given.