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Showing posts with label ACT/SAT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ACT/SAT. Show all posts

April 5, 2017

New SAT: Great Advice from the College Panda

The College Panda got a perfect score on the New SAT last May and posted some test-taking tips on his blog. Here are a few items from his helpful list of things to watch out for:
  • Because [the New SAT is easier than the old SAT], expect score inflation. It used to be that a 1500/1600 on the math and reading sections would be a top-notch score. Now you need a 1540/1600 to be on par.
  • All the math strategies that helped on the old exam are still very much relevant to the new one (Making Up Numbers, Plugging in Answer Choices)
  • You should know how to do the following by hand for the non-calculator section: basic arithmetic, arithmetic with fractions, factoring, completing the square.
  • Expect a tricky supporting evidence question (the ones that ask which lines best support your previous answer). The secret to getting these right is a two-step process: 1) Try to figure out the lines before you see the answer choices, and 2) Always ask yourself whether the lines you chose actually support your previous answer. On the trickier ones, there will be a trap answer choice that supports the passage’s main idea or another related point in the passage. Because this trap answer mirrors the passage, it will probably relate to the prior answer you’re trying to support, and you’ll find yourself torn between the correct answer and this trap answer. When this happens, go with the the answer that most directly supports your previous one, not the one that indirectly supports it through the main idea of the passage. I promise this will make more sense once you do some practice.
It's well worth the effort to read his entire original post.


March 27, 2017

2016-17 ACT Math Problem 54: Think Like a Fifth Grader

54. A dog eats 7 cans of food in 3 days. At this rate, how many cans of food does the dog eat in 3 + d days?
F. 7/3 + d
G. 7/3 + d/3
H. 7/3 + 7/(3d)
J. 7 + d/3
K. 7 + 7d/3

This problem is from the 2016-17 Preparing for the ACT practice test booklet. We could do it (the slow way) with a proportion.




Warning! Warning! A fifth grader would not do this the slow way.
Notice that we've added units to the numbers (cans, days) to help us set up the proportion correctly. Cans are in the numerators, and days are in the denominators. We used a question mark in the proportion to make it really clear that we need to solve for the number of cans, not the value of d. It's really easy to mess up and solve for the wrong variable!

(If you don't want to use a question mark, you can place an x there instead and draw a really big, thick, dark circle around the x.)

We'll replace the question mark with an x and then solve for x:


That answer is the same as 7 + 7d/3, so (K) is the correct answer.

Are you tired yet?

If you're like the high schoolers I know, you might have made a mistake somewhere. F, G, H, and J are traps designed to catch people who don't multiply or divide correctly in the steps above. This is problem 54 out of 60, and ACT problems tend to look harder ask you approach the end of the test, so we should definitely look out for trap answers.

Fortunately, every ACT question has a quick solution that takes less than 30 seconds. You can avoid unnecessary torture by looking for shortcuts a fifth grader would use.


Would you have PWNed the ACT in fifth grade?
A fifth grader thinks way less abstractly than high schoolers do. Being less abstract can help us avoid getting trapped. If we don't have to multiply an abstract unknown x by 7 or divide it by 3, it's a lot harder to make a mistake!

In this case, we know that the dog eats 7 cans of food in three days. We can already cross of three of the answer choices because they don't give us 7 when d = 0!

54. A dog eats 7 cans of food in 3 days. At this rate, how many cans of food does the dog eat in 3 + d days?
F. 7/3 + d
G. 7/3 + d/3
H. 7/3 + 7/(3d)
J. 7 + d/3
K. 7 + 7d/3

To decide between J and K, we need a second scenario. Let's pick something fifth-grade easy: if the dog eats 7 cans of food in 3 days, it'll eat 14 cans of food in 6 days. Since we have 3 + d days, the dog will eat 14 cans of food when d = 3.

(J) gives us 7 + 3/3 = 8 when d = 3, so (J) is wrong.
(K) gives us 7 + 7*3/3 = 14 when d = 3, so (K) is right.

(K) is correct because we eliminated the other four choices and because it gave us the right answer when we plugged in d = 0 and d = 3. We can feel really confident about our choice now and move on to the next question.

Math teachers discourage students from thinking this way because it makes middle school math tests way too easy. Fortunately, there's no rule on the ACT saying you have to show your work or solve problems algebraically, so you should always look for the easiest solution.

Generally speaking, if an ACT problem confuses you, try spending 10 seconds to look for a fifth-grade solution. If the problem still confuses you, skip it and come back later after you've made your first pass through the test.

P.S. Your teacher wants you to show your work at school, but you can still double-check your answers the fifth-grade way. On a logarithm test, plug in the original problem and your simplified expression into your calculator and make sure they give you the same answer. If you're doing polynomial long division, plug x = 2 into the original expression and into your answer to make sure that they spit out the same number. For an indefinite integral, evaluate your answer as a definite integral on paper and on your calculator to make sure the numbers match. Doing every problem this way will get you an A on almost any math test.

Which one of these contestants is you?