Dumbest question ever

<p>Hours of television viewing in a week</p>

<p>Hours per child Number of children
6 _____________<strong><em>1
9</em></strong>
________<strong><em>4
11 _</em></strong>
___________ 2
14_____________<strong><em>3
18</em></strong>
_____________5</p>

<p>19) The table above shows the number of hours of television viewing by 15 children last week. What is the median number of hours of viewing per child?</p>

<p>(A)9
(B)11
(C)12
(D)13
(E)14</p>

<p>6 <strong><em>1
9</em></strong>_<strong><em>4
11 </em></strong>
2
14
<strong><em>3
18</em></strong>________________5</p>

<p>6,9,9,9,9,11,11,14,14,14,18,18,18,18,18</p>

<p>haha wow I feel stupid now</p>

<p>Was that really question number 19?</p>

<p>yes it was 19 in the October 21, 2006 Psat. I was expecting a much more complicated answer lol</p>

<p>haha dont stress over the PSAT. it doesnt really matter that much anyways, colleges dont look at it, and its math questions are usually much easier than the SAT :slight_smile: i’m sure you’ll be fine</p>

<p>it really does matter. Well I just did a math PSAT right now and I can score better than the blue book. So people were wrong about identity between the PSAT & SAT’s Math proportion.
Maybe people don’t know what median means</p>