Hi thanks alot Albert!! You were right, factoring in the 20 mL and calculate the proportion did the trick.
So the solution should resemble something like this:
The balanced chemical equation of the first reaction is CaCO3 + 2HCl -> CO2 + H2O + CaCl2
The balanced chemical equation of the second reaction is HCl + NaOH -> NaCl + H2O
The initial amount of moles of HCl = (0.25 L)(0.472 M)=0.118 mol
After the first reaction, 0.25 L of solution remained but some of the initial moles of HCl were consumed. We took 0.02 L from 0.25 L solution to perform a titration. We found that it required 0.0272 L of 0.0562 M NaOH to titrate.
From the second balanced chemical equation, we see that HCl:NaOH = 1:1. Therefore the moles of HCl in 0.02 L of the 0.25 L solution = (0.0272 L)(0.0562 M)=0.00153 mol
By proportion, the number of moles in 0.25 L of the solution that remained following the first reaction is 0.0191 mol.
Thus, the number of moles of HCl that were consumed in the first equation = 0.118 mol - 0.0191 mol = 0.0988 mol
From the first balanced chemical equation we saw that CaCO3:HCl = 1:2. Then moles of CaCO3 = (0.0988mol)/2
Finally, the mass of CaCO3 = (1/2)(0.0988 mol)(40.08 + 12.01 + 48)g/mol = 4.95 g.