ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Playlist Statistics and Probability Test Questions 17 videos
SAT Math 1.1 Statistics and Probability. In which of the following data sets are the arithmetic mean and the median equal?
SAT Math: Statistics and Probability Drill 1, Problem 2. If the four largest numbers in the set were doubled, what would happen to the median...
SAT Math 1.3 Statistics and Probability. Approximately what is the probability that they will be placed in alphabetical order?
SAT Math 3.3 Statistics and Probability 220 Views
Share It!
Description:
SAT Math 3.3 Statistics and Probability
Transcript
- 00:02
Here’s your shmoop du jour, brought to you by Maps.
- 00:05
Before Google Maps, we used to use ACTUAL maps.
- 00:10
On a map, 1/3 of an inch represents 12 miles.
- 00:13
What is the real-life distance of two cities that are 7 5/6 inches apart on the map?
- 00:18
And here are the potential answers…
Full Transcript
- 00:25
This problem can be solved with a very simple unit conversion.
- 00:29
Uh…no. An even simpler unit conversion.
- 00:32
We’ll start with the 7 and 5/6 inches on the map we’re given.
- 00:35
It’s much easier to solve this thing if we’ve got it in improper fraction form,
- 00:40
so we’ll change it up.
- 00:41
7 is the same as 42/6… and 42/6 plus 5/6 equals 47/6. Done.
- 00:51
Now, we can convert.
- 00:53
When we convert between units, all we’re doing is multiplying by a fancy form of 1.
- 00:57
We multiply 47/6 inches by 12 miles per 1/3 inch.
- 01:05
And we have, 12 divided by 1/3 is really just 12 times 3, so we have 47/6 times 36.
- 01:14
We can divide the top and bottom by 6 to get 47 times 6, which is equal to 282.
- 01:20
Our answer is (D).
Related Videos
SAT Math 2.1 Geometry and Measurement. What is the measure of angle z in terms of x and y?
In 2014, the unemployment rate of one county in California was 7%. In another county, the unemployment rate was 11%. Which of the following express...
Angela is making cookies for a bake sale. She expects each batch of her cookies to sell for $40. It costs her $10 to make one batch of cookies, and...