7 Maths GCSE Questions

You're quite right! Now i've looked at the question again I think the question should really point out it's not to scale. It didn't even click in my head how much of an angle 72 is. Anything more than 60 degrees and it's going to be less than half which, with the options the BBC give, leaves only one valid answer :p

I admit that's how I did that question ... :) .... overall 7/7

(GCSE Maths '91: A(ext) ... none of those "*"'s back then, we had to do another paper to get more than an A)
 
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...is complete bollards. On what planet does 4*(3/5) - 2*(1/3) make 34/15?

You have to multiply both by 15 to get rid of both denominators. You use the number 15 because 5 and 3 are both factors. That will make them whole numbers 69 and 35. Subtract them to get 34, re-divide by 15 so you end up with 34/15.
 
Being an electronic engineer, i'd have been horrified if i'd got less than 7. So luckily, I did get 7. :o
 
7/7.
I am really bad at mental arithmetic. Mixed fractions are ugly and should never ever be used also they kind of break convention unless proper formatting is used.
 
You have to multiply both by 15 to get rid of both denominators. You use the number 15 because 5 and 3 are both factors. That will make them whole numbers 69 and 35. Subtract them to get 34, re-divide by 15 so you end up with 34/15.

He has a degree in maths. He knows.

or are you deliberately being patronising?
 
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7/7.
I am really bad at mental arithmetic. Mixed fractions are ugly and should never ever be used also they kind of break convention unless proper formatting is used.

I think they are okay in a casual environment where little calculation is to be performed and it's a 'nice' fraction, i.e. 1 and 1/3 wouldn't be so bad, however something like 7 and 3/7 would just be stupid. I think what it boils down to is what you can imagine. Nobody can picture a pie and say, yup I know what 3/7ths looks like, so you'd never need a mixed fraction that included it. Like I say though, if you're actually going to be using maths with the number then leave it in decimal or full fraction form.
 
If it was 4 times 3/5 it would say 4(3/5).

No it wouldn't (necessarily). There is an "order" of operations when there is a lack of parentheses....

1) Exponents (Powers, Roots)
2) Multiply or Divide
3) Add or Subtract
4) Left to Right

So 4(3/5) gives the same result as 4 3/5. If you don't believe me, open up MS Excel then do some formulas without the parentheses, you see it always calculates following the order I mentioned above.

Having said that I'm a big fan of bracketing, just makes it easier to read.
 
Unless I work with math, I forget math. I rocked at Math during College while doing my Engineering. Trig, Algebra, loved it. Algebra I actually still know how to do. I was working at A level Math during College, and 2 years ago I was doing Maths again. I actually have a piece of paper on my desk with different formula's to try help me retain what I learn. But it hasn't worked.

I just don't have a brain that can hold math unless it's an area I really enjoyed like algebra and long division, anyway I got 1 out of 7 on the BBC and scored much better on the O level link.

I am an Engineer, I can't afford to be wrong so I use a calculator, that's my defence.
 
Unless I work with math, I forget math. I rocked at Math during College while doing my Engineering. Trig, Algebra, loved it. Algebra I actually still know how to do. I was working at A level Math during College, and 2 years ago I was doing Maths again. I actually have a piece of paper on my desk with different formula's to try help me retain what I learn. But it hasn't worked.

I just don't have a brain that can hold math unless it's an area I really enjoyed like algebra and long division, anyway I got 1 out of 7 on the BBC and scored much better on the O level link.

I am an Engineer, I can't afford to be wrong so I use a calculator, that's my defence.

Probably gonna get flamed but I absolutely cannot stand when people say 'math' without the s.
 
Unless I work with math, I forget math. I rocked at Math during College while doing my Engineering. Trig, Algebra, loved it. Algebra I actually still know how to do. I was working at A level Math during College, and 2 years ago I was doing Maths again. I actually have a piece of paper on my desk with different formula's to try help me retain what I learn. But it hasn't worked.

I just don't have a brain that can hold math unless it's an area I really enjoyed like algebra and long division, anyway I got 1 out of 7 on the BBC and scored much better on the O level link.

I am an Engineer, I can't afford to be wrong so I use a calculator, that's my defence.

It's maths, not math. It's 5 letters not 4. What's the difference?






1

Milton Jones
 
Probably gonna get flamed but I absolutely cannot stand when people say 'math' without the s.

To be fair neither is "wrong" and arguably the US version is 'more' correct. We don't retain the 's' is other contractions of words that end in that letter.

For example the contraction of Hippopotamus (singular) is 'Hippo' not 'Hippos'.

Mathematics is singular, so there's no logical reason to retain the 's' when we shorten it.
 
To be fair neither is "wrong" and arguably the US version is 'more' correct. We don't retain the 's' is other contractions of words that end in that letter.

For example the contraction of Hippopotamus (singular) is 'Hippo' not 'Hippos'.

Mathematics is singular, so there's no logical reason to retain the 's' when we shorten it.

This is all true but it still makes me cringe when I hear people say it.
 
English is something I am fairly good at. Math or Maths, both are fine, it's all down to the individual, like soft or hard G on "Gif".

Funny you say that, I only heard someone pronounce it 'Jif' for the first time the other day, I though he was talking about a cleaning product.

P.S Your first sentence is rather ironic given your misuse of the comma in the second ;)
 
No it wouldn't (necessarily). There is an "order" of operations when there is a lack of parentheses....

1) Exponents (Powers, Roots)
2) Multiply or Divide
3) Add or Subtract
4) Left to Right

So 4(3/5) gives the same result as 4 3/5. If you don't believe me, open up MS Excel then do some formulas without the parentheses, you see it always calculates following the order I mentioned above.

Having said that I'm a big fan of bracketing, just makes it easier to read.

Excel would spit out an error if you did that. There is no implied multiplication in 4 3/5.
 
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