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Introduction to ACT Math A quick review of concepts Introduction to the ACT mathematics Test What to expect • 33 Algebra Questions:14 pre algebra 10 elementary algebra 9 intermediate algebra • 23 Geometry Questions:14 plane geometry 9 coordinate geometry • 4 Trigonometry Questions: based on sine, cosine, and tangent Do NOT expect • A formula page before the math section The writers care more about what you know then the SAT PRACTICE PRACTICE PRACTICE!!! EASY • 1) Cynthia, Peter, Nancy, and Kevin are all carpenters. Last week, each built the following number of chairs: 36-Cynthia 45-Peter 74-Nancy 13-Kevin What was the average for the week? A) 39 B)42 C)55 D)59 E)63 Answer • Sum of everything/number of things=average • 36+45+74+13/4+average • ANSWER IS 42 (B) Medium Problem • Four carpenters built an average of 42 chairs each last week. If Cynthia built 36, Nancy built 74, and Kevin built 13 chairs, how many chairs did Peter build? F)24 G)37 H)45 J)53 K)67 ANSWER • • • • 36+74+13+Peter/4=42 36+74+13+Peter=168 168-123=45 Answer is 45(H) Hard • Four Carpenters each built an average of 42 chairs last week. If no chairs were left uncompleted, and if Peter, who built 50 chairs, built the greatest number of chairs, what is the LEAST number of chairs one of the carpenters could of built, if no carpenter built a fractional number of chairs? A) 18 D)39.33 B)19 E)51 C)20 ANSWER • • • • • 50+x+y+z/4=42 50+x+y+z=168 50+49+49+z=168 Z=20 Answer is C Ballpark • Narrowing down your choices by guessing. • Practice: There are 600 schools children in the Lakeville district. If 54 of them are high school seniors, what is the percentage of high school seniors in the Lakeville district? A) .9% D)11% B) 2.32% E)90% C) 9% Answer • 10% of 600 is 60 so it is less then 10% so choices D and E don’t work • A and B don’t work because we need an answer slightly less then 10% • Answer is C Partial Answers • Students sometimes think they have completed a problem before it is actually complete. • Watch out for these traps and read the questions carefully Practice • A bus line charges $5 each way to ferry a passenger between the hotel and an archaeological dig. On a given day, the bus line has a capacity to carry 255 passengers from the hotel to the dig and back. If the bus line runs at 90% of capacity, how much money did the bus line take in that day? • F) $1,147.50 J) $2,550 • G) $1,275 K) $ 2,625 • H) $2,295 Answer • Well, 255 passengers pay $5= $2,550 • If you were in a hurry you would probably stop there but we need to find 90% of $2,550 • Both F and J are partial • The answer is H) $2,295 Take Bite-Size Pieces • Difficulty is determined by the number of steps involved • You have to break these questions into manageable steps in order to avoid partial answers Sample • Each member in a club had to choose an activity for the day of volunteer work. 1/3 of the members chose to pick up trash. ¼ of the remaining members chose to paint fences. 5/6 of the members still without tasks chose to clean school busses. The rest of the members chose to plant trees. If the club has 36 members, how many of the members chose to plant trees? • F) 3 G) 6 H) 9 J)12 K)15 work 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Write down 36 in your work area Find 1/3 of 36=12 so 12 picked up trash Find ¼ of 24=6 so 6 people painted fences 5/6 of 18 =15 so 15 people cleaned busses Now it sais all of the remaining people planted trees so 18-15=3 so 3 people planted trees. 6. F is the answer ????????Calculators???????? • TI-89 and TI-92 are not allowed • Plan to bring a TI-83 or other calculator on the approved list make sure it can: Handle positive, negative, and fractional exponents Use parenthesis Graph simple function Convert fractions to decimals and vice versa Change a linear equation into y=mx+b form basics Words to know • Real numbers- are any number you can think of. • Rational numbers- any number that can be written as a whole number, fraction, an integer over another integer. • Irrational numbers-cannot be written as an integer over another integer Negatives& positives • Positive numbers are to the right of the 0 on the number line. Negative numbers are to the left of the 0 on the number line. • Positive x positive= positive • Positive x negative- negative • Negative x negative= positive • ex: 5+ (-3)=2 Prime numbers • A prime number can be divided evenly by two and only two distant factors. • Thus, 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13 are all prime. • There are no negative prime numbers Absolute value • The absolute value of a number is the distance between that number and 0 on the number line. • Ex. |6|=6 |-6|=6 Variables and coefficients • In the expression 3x+4y, x and y are the variables because we don’t know what they are. • 3 and 4 are the coefficients because you multiply the variables by them. Basic opperations • Divisibility Rules1. A number is divisible by 2 if its units digit can be divided evenly by 2 ( in other words, if it is even.) 46 is divisible by 2. So is 3,574 2. A number is divisible by 3 if it sums of its digits can be divided evenly by 3. 3. A number is divisible by 4 if the number formed by its last two digits is also divisible by 4. 316 is divisible by 4. Factors & multiples • a number is a factor of another number if it can be divided evenly into that number. • Ex: 3 is a factor of 15 because 3 can be divided evenly into 15. • A number is a multiple of another number if it can be divided evenly by that number. Ex: multiples of 15 include 15, 30, 45, and 60. Standard symbols • • • • • • Is not equal too ≠ Is equal too = < is less then > is greater then ≤ is less then or equal too ≥ is greater then or equal too Exponents • Base is called the lower and larger number • Exponent is the upper number. • 6^2 x 6^3 = 6^( 2+3) = 6^5 • (y^) (y^3) = y^(2+3)= y^5 Dividing Numbers with the same base • When you divide numbers that have the same base, you simply subtract the bottom exponent from the top exponent. Negative Powers • A negative power is simply the reciprocal of a positive power. Fractional Powers • Numerator: the number above the line in a fraction, functions like a real exponent. • Denominator: the number below the line in a fraction, tells you what power radical to make the number. When wanting to raise a power to a power, you Simply multiply the exponents. Powers • The Zero power anything to the zero power is 1 • The first power anything to the first power is itself. • Distributing exponents when several numbers are inside parentheses, the exponent outside the parentheses must be distributed to all of the numbers within. • Square root of a positive number x is the number that when squared equals x. • radical is the symbol for a positive square root is √. • Cube root of a positive number x is the number that, when cubed, equals x. Tips for act math • Order of operations is: parentheses, exponents, times, addition, and subtraction. • Fractions ,decimals, ratios, percentages, average charts and graphs combinations • Calculators – students are permitted to use calculators on act. • The associative law: when adding a string of numbers, you can add them in any order you like. The same thing is true when multiplying a string of numbers. • (-5)+4)2 {8/2 plus 4-8=0 • • The Distributive Law: the distribute states that if a problem gives you information in factor which is a(b+c) - you should distribute it immededitately. • If the information is given in distribute form which is Ab + Ac you should factor it. Fractions • A fraction is just another way of expressing division. • A fraction is made up of a numerator and denominator. • The numerator is on the top and the denominator is on the bottom. • To reduce a fraction, see if the numerator and the denominator have a common factor . • Whatever factor they share can now be canceled. Lets take the fraction 6/8. Is there a common factor ? YES -2 • Sometimes a problem will involve deciding which two fractions is larger. • Which is larger 2/5 or 4/5 ? Think of these parts of a whole. Which is bigger , two parts of five or four parts out of five? • 4/5 is clearly larger , they both had the same whole, or the same denominator. • Which ,is larger, 2/3 or 3/7 ? To decide, we need to find a common whole , denominator or denominator. You change the denominator of a fraction by multiplying it by another number. To keep an entire fraction the same, however, you must multiply the numerator by the same number. • Change the denominator by 2/3 into 21. • Which is the largest? 2/3, 4/7, 3/5? • To compare these fraction directly, you need a common denominator. Compare these fractions two at a time, start with 2/3 and 4/7 an easy common denominator is 21. Using the bowtie • We get the common denominator by multiplying the 2 denominators together. • 2/3 --- 3/5 • 2/3 is larger Adding and subtracting fractions • Adding and subtracting fractions is simple. Use the bowtie to add 2/5 and ¼ • 2/5 +1/4 = 8+5/20 = 13/20 • Use the bowtie to subtract 2/3 and 5/6 • 5/6 – 2/3 = 15-12/18 or 1/6 RATIOS Ratio is always part over part. Not like fractions which are part over whole. An example of a ratio is like 4 cats over 3 dogs, but the total would be 7 animals. Percentages A percentage is a fraction in which the denominator equals 100. In literal terms, percent means “ divided by 100,”. You can always express a percentage as a fraction. Percentage Shortcuts You can save time by remembering some fractions and what their percentage is. For example: 1/5 is 20 percent so whatever number over 5, then you multiply that number by 20. Another fast way is by using decimal points. To find 10 percent you move the point of the number over one place to the left and to find 1 percent you move the decimal point two places to the left. Averages • Multiply # of things times avg then divided total by what it equals • 9 times 8 equals 72 • 72-42 or 30 divided by 2 equals 15 Weighted average • Arithmetic mean the average • Median =middle • Mode=element appears most Charts and graphs • Decipher information presented in a graph • If you can read a simple graph, then you can solve the problem. Combinations The number of combinations is the product of the number of things of each type from which you have to choose. The rule for combination problems on the ACT is straightforward. Info about ACT algebra • Algebra is all about solving for an unknown quantity. • There are two general kinds of algebra questions on the ACT. • The first asked you to solve for a particular x. • The second kind asks you to solve for a more cosmic x. The golden rule of algebra • Whatever you do to one side, you have to do to the other side of the equation. Steps to working backwards 1.Start with the middle-(C or (H) 2.If its big, go to the next smaller choice 3.If its too small, go to the next larger choice • When you see numbers in the answer choices and when the question asked in the last of the problem is relatively straight forward. • You don’t want to work backward . In the case, the answers wont give us a value to try for either x or y . Math terms • Is = (any form of the verb ”be” is the same as • Of product times • What a certain number Percent • 30 percent • What percent • More than • Less than • = • X(multiplication) • S , y , a z (your favorite variable. • 100(alternatively we could use over 100) • 300/100 • x/100 • +(addiction) • -(subtraction) The other method is plugging in • The advantage of using a specific number is that our minds do not think naturally in terms of variables • 1. Pick numbers for the variables in the problem (and write them down). • 2.using your numbers , find an answer to the problem . • 3.Plug your numbers into the answer choice to see which choice equals the answer you found How you spot a problem • Any problem with variables in the answer choices is a cosmic problem. You may not choose to plug in every one of these, but you could plug in on all of them. FOIL • First-multiply the first two terms in each polynomial • outer/inner – multiply the outer terms from each polynomial and add the two terms then the middle • Last-multiply the last terms in each polynomial. The acts favorite factors • Train yourself to recognize these quadratic expressions instantly in both factored and unfactored form : • X^2-y^2= (x+y)(x-y) • X^2 +2xy+y^2= (x+y)^2 • X^2-2xy+y^2=(x-y)^2 Geometry • There are 23 geometry questions on the math ACT. To Scale or Not To Scale? • Every diagram is drawn exactly to scale. • ACT diagrams were never intended to be misleading. P.O.E. • Since the problems are always drawn to scale, it will be possible to get very close approximations of the correct answers before you even do the problems. Important Approximations • You may want to eliminate problems that contain answer choices with radicals or pie. What Should I Do If There Is No Diagram? • Draw One! • It’s always easier to understand a problem when you can see it in front of you. Triangles • A triangle is a three-sided figure whose inside angles always add up to 180 degrees. • The largest angle of a triangle is always opposite to the largest side. Types of Triangles • • • • There are 3 types of triangles. Isosceles, Equilateral, and right. Isosceles triangle has 2 equal sides. Equilateral triangle has 3 equal sides and 3 equal angles. • Right triangle has 1 inside angle that is equal to 90 degrees. Four-Sided Figures • Rectangle: Four sided figure whose four interior angles are equal to 90 degrees. • Square: Rectangle whose four sides are all equal in length. • Parallelogram: Four sided figure made up of two sets of parallel lines. • Trapezoid: Four sided figure in which two sides are parallel. Circles • Radius: Distance from the center of a circle to any point on the circle. • Diameter: Distance from one point on a circle through the center of the circle to another point. Formulas • The formula for the area of a circle is pie r squared. • The formula for the circumference is two pie squared. Slope Formula • • • • All you need is two points Helps you find the slope of a line S= y1-y2/x1-x2 ex| (-2,5),(6,4) 5-4/-2-6 = -1/8 Midpoint Formula • [x1+x2/2 + y1+y2/2] Circles, ellipses, and parabolas • • • • (x-h)^2 + (y-k)^2 = r^2 (h ,k) enter of circle R= radius *the Standard equ. For an ellipses just a squatlooking circle • (x-h)^2/a^2 + (y-k)^2/b^2 = 1 • (h ,k) Center of ellipses • 2a= horizontal axis(width) 2b= Vertical axis(Height) • *Parabolas is a U-Shaped line The distance Formulas • You are able to do Pythagorean Theorem. • A^2+B^2=C^2 • Example! What is the distance between points A(2,2) & B(5,6) • • • • • A) 3 B) 4 C) 5 D) 6 E) 7 The distance Formulas • You are able to do Pythagorean Theorem. • A^2+B^2=C^2 • Example! What is the distance between points A(2,2) & B(5,6) • A) 3 • B) 4 • C) 5 • D) 6 • E) 7 Graphing Inequalities 3x+5>11 -5 -5 3x>6 X>2 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 1. Which of the following represents the range of solutions for inequality -5x-<x+5 -5x-7<x+5 -x -x -6x-7<5 +7 +7 -6x<12 X>-2 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 POE Poitets -5 (-4) -7 <(-4) +5 20 -7 < 1 13 < 1 You plug in the answer to the exponent to see if it works Graph in two dimension X Is Negative Y is Positive X Is Negative Y is Positive Quadrant II Quadrant I X Is Negative Y is Negative X Is positive Y is negative Quadrant III Quadrant IV Trigonometry SohCahToa • Sine= Opposite over hypotenuse • Cosine= Adjacent over hypotenuse • Tangent= Opposite over adjacent Hypotenuse opposite X Adjacent 3 more relationships • They evolve the reciprocals of the previous three • Cosecant= hypotenuse over opposite • Secant= adjacent over hypotenuse • Cotangent= adjacent over opposite Example • What is the sinǿ if the tanǿ=4/3 1. Draw a triangle with the opposite 4 and adjacent 3 2. Use A²+B²=C² 3. 3²+4²=C² 4. 9+16=25 5.Square root of 25=5 which is the hypotenuse 6. Sine is opposite over hypotenuse 7. The answer is 4/5 Harder Trigonometry • Amplitude- Is the height of the curve. If y=AsinØ the amplitude would be A. If A is negative then the graph reflects over the xaxis • Period- How long it take to get through a complete cycle • If there is no amplitude then A=1 Example • y=1sin2x 2 1 1 2 π/2