Education
Related: About this forumCan you answer this math question from a practice test for the SAT?
http://www.upworthy.com/can-you-answer-this-sample-question-from-the-newly-redesigned-satSAT study blogs recommend spending only about 75 seconds on each math problem, so you should set a timer.
Ready?
A typical image taken of the surface of Mars by a camera is 11.2 gigabits in size. A tracking station on Earth can receive data from the spacecraft at a data rate of 3 megabits per second for a maximum of 11 hours each day. If 1 gigabit equals 1,024 megabits, what is the maximum number of typical images that the tracking station could receive from the camera each day?
A) 3
B) 10
C) 56
D) 144
*You can find the answer at the bottom of this story.
Keep in mind that the numeric details here are presented in an intentionally confusing order, from which multiple equations must be extrapolated before any math can actually be done.
Give up? Timer run out? Or hey, maybe you answered it without even blinking (no judgements here ... nerd).
That question comes from the newly redesigned SAT, which will roll out in March 2016.
2pooped2pop
(5,420 posts)And that's definitely a bad place to do math. I thought it might be slightly under 10 which would make it only 3. So I imagine the actual answer is c or d which I didn't guess. Lol
Erich Bloodaxe BSN
(14,733 posts)So doing that question in under 75 seconds (or even under 30) is pretty straightforward IF you understand what the question is saying. And that's what the article's about, how the questions are being worded in ways that are more confusing for english as a second language folks.
Still, ESOL types are going to have a definite disadvantage on any timed test. In our nursing classes, second language students tended to be given more time to finish the tests, which didn't bother the rest of us, since what you actually DO in nursing doesn't usually involve a ton of reading when time is tight.
oswaldactedalone
(3,557 posts)With a calculator took about two mins to get it.
Travis_0004
(5,417 posts)3×60×60×1024×11
Divide that by 11.2×1024
Jim__
(14,489 posts)Divide that by 11.2×1024
You don't, of course, want a factor of 1024 in the dividend.
Warren Stupidity
(48,181 posts)FBaggins
(27,773 posts)They focus less on computational skills and more on "setting up the problem". Students who are "bad at word problems" tend to have a tougher time. On the other hand (unless it has changed), it only goes through geometry.
A valid alternative for many students is to take the ACTs instead. It covers more of high school math (trig?), but requires less evaluation/analysis.
eppur_se_muova
(37,585 posts)No calculators needed.
Of course, I've been doing astronomical calculations lately, so 3600 seconds/hr, 86400 seconds/day are as familiar to me as the first hundred digits of pi.