<p>lol thanks voodoo, 12 was the median? did the numbers even go up to 12?</p>
<p>I don't think its 12. The answer is the difference of the median hours slept and time studied. I got 7 and 2 and therefore 5. I think I may have screwed up the average the two middlemost datapoints if the number of datapoints was even however (was it?)</p>
<p>(unless we're talking about different questions...)</p>
<p>i got 5 as well</p>
<p>There was 15 data points. You didn't need to count them, it was stated in the problem that there were 15 students.</p>
<p>lol i was just guessing i forgot what the actual numbers were but i did it out and pretty sure i got it</p>
<p>well there were 15 points and apparently if you subtract the two, you get 5. Anyone want to confirm?</p>
<p>ya i got 5 as well</p>
<p>for the black girl passage...did you guys have an answer that was "confessing to a level of self-absorbtion" ?</p>
<p>^no the answer to that is genuine conviction</p>
<p>narcissa/norabelle, what was the question?</p>
<p>i think i said genuine conviction tho</p>
<p>what was the question??</p>
<p>narcissa did you put shrewd financial decisions?</p>
<p>i said shrewed, the parents one seemed silly and too specific. Wasn't the answer with he crater one something with pan...?</p>
<p>How come I can't recall geniune conviction??</p>
<p>What question was that?? The Mirrors one or something else?</p>
<p>So for the germans and italians... i understand you've argued about this but I'm not sure I agree. I totally get your math on each side, what I don't get is how you're interpreting the question. Here's the wording I remember. "There are 30 students in a language program. These students study italian, german, or both. If three more students total study german than italian and the number of students who study any one language is equal to the number who study both, then how many students study only italian?"</p>
<p>OK, so I got 9. I interpreted "any ONE language" as students studying either german OR italian only (one language, not multiple languages, so you can't look at both added together, need to pick ONE). In retrospect, however, I also understand the interpretation "ANY one language" meaning that the students had to study one language, and it could be either, just as long as you don't take two. I'm perfectly clear on the math, for the first interpretation you get 9 and for the second you get 6. What I don't understand is how I was possibly supposed to make that distinction on the test or how we've collectively overcome this semantical issue.</p>
<p>For reference, I got a 2340 in march. I missed two questions on the entire test, both math, one because i misgridded and the other because I messed up punching numbers into the calculator. I'm retaking for the perfect math score and I'll be pretty sad if i don't get it haha</p>
<p>Anyone remember a question where it had like 5 values and you had to find the median or something.</p>
<p>something like x^3 , x^2 , x, 1/x , 1/x^2</p>
<p>haha sorry for such little information</p>
<p>do you remember the question which said "the last paragraph indicates all of the following EXCEPT"
I put D Some related with sun?</p>
<p>the median is x^3? just put a number and check it yourself!</p>
<p>someone answer my question on general conviction!!!</p>
<p>and yes, I put D and for the math I put x^3 ( i think)</p>
<p>Does anyone know which CR section was experimental for the test thathad 4 CR sections? I'm pretty sure it was section 3 or 4...hope section 3.</p>
<p>Also 2 questions for math: 70%? 9 Italians?</p>
<p>I put 1/x for the median cause wasn't x a negative number?</p>