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-   -   Math problem Pissing me off!! (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/264659-math-problem-pissing-me-off.html)

Jims5543 02-04-2006 08:31 AM

Math problem Pissing me off!!
 
My 12 year old just came to me for help on this math problem.


What two numbers have a product of 24 and a difference of 5?

I pride myself in being able to solve his math problems with ease. Especially a 6th grade math problem.

I do not know if I am just not awake enough but I cannot come up with the answer.

Someone want to explain this one to me?

Jims5543 02-04-2006 08:33 AM

I just woke up!! 8*3

Never mind!!

I guess typing it out helped. I was reading product and thinking sum in my head.

singpilot 02-04-2006 11:23 AM

There's nothing like a 12 year old to teach you how much you have forgotten about math.

Aurel 02-04-2006 12:15 PM

X*Y=24
X-Y=5

X=Y+5
(Y+5)*Y=24
Y^2+5*Y-24=0

D=5*5+4*24=121
Y=(-5+-sqrt(121))/2 = 6/2=3
X=3+5=8

Second degree equation baby ! That`s how you do it mathematically.

Aurel

TerryH 02-04-2006 12:38 PM

1*24=23
2*12=10
3*8=5
4*6=2

I remember taking some college night classes and at one point we were doing quadratic equations. A lot of the students were using tutors because the class was very progressive and spent little time on any one topic. While doing homework one night, my wife called me to the TV and there was a class doing the same exact equations on a PBS station. It was an 8th grade class. :)

The instructor was involved in the jettisoning of human waste at NASA way back when.

84porsche 02-04-2006 09:39 PM

Interesting problem. Makes me miss my Algebra days.

Eric H 02-04-2006 10:09 PM

Well, if we're going to do math let's do it right - there are two correct solutions - note the +- in Aurel's equation...

aways 02-05-2006 12:34 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Eric H
Well, if we're going to do math let's do it right - there are two correct solutions - note the +- in Aurel's equation...
that's right.
x=-3
y=-8
is also correct...

Nathans_Dad 02-05-2006 01:09 AM

Bush hates math.

(I bet he really does!)

onewhippedpuppy 02-05-2006 04:30 AM

When visiting family, I ended up helping my 17 yr old sister-in-law with her homework. Now note that I am an engineering student, and have been through Calc 3 and Differential Equations. It took me the longest time to figure out synthetic division so that I could help her, I felt like a total dumbass. What is the saying about being educated to the point of stupidity?

M.D. Holloway 02-05-2006 07:25 PM

Here's one that made my son go nuts for 30 minutes.

"OK Max, what is 1+1 equal."

"Dad, thats so easy, its 2!"

"Nope, it's 3 or 1 but not two. Heres an example. Lets say I'm 1 and Mommy is 1. When you added us up we had you which made it another 1 or 3 total!"

"Dad, thats...hay, how'd you do that?"

I did straighten him out but only after having him think it through.

TerryH 02-05-2006 08:08 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by LubeMaster77
Here's one that made my son go nuts for 30 minutes.

"OK Max, what is 1+1 equal."

"Dad, thats so easy, its 2!"

"Nope, it's 3 or 1 but not two. Heres an example. Lets say I'm 1 and Mommy is 1. When you added us up we had you which made it another 1 or 3 total!"

"Dad, thats...hay, how'd you do that?"

I did straighten him out but only after having him think it through.

That's cute.... unless Max is 28. :p

snowman 02-05-2006 08:16 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by mikester
In Los angeles county some numbers indicatate that somewheres along 40% of high school students fail algebra their first time.
Its more like 50% after the umteenth time. My kids passed in the 9th grade, thats the HIGH SCHOOL exit exam. So you only have to have an 8th grade education to graduate HS in CA and the lazy sobs called teachers can only get 50 percent of the 50 percent that don't drop out (gee that sounds like 25% to me) to pass. Gotta love those teachers unions. OOPS I forgot the passing grade is only like 50%, so maybe 12.5% really have an eight grade education after 12 years.

I suspect that most kids could do better if they wern't required to attend school at all. The finest LIBERAL education in the world.

MY kids arn't all that smart either. Its just that they had about 2 to 3 years education in a non CA public schools, and that was dance class, you know 5, 6, 7,8 likely the only real education they received in 1-12.

LA schools are not as bad as they say they are, they are worse, much much worse.

yellowline 02-05-2006 09:00 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by onewhippedpuppy
When visiting family, I ended up helping my 17 yr old sister-in-law with her homework. Now note that I am an engineering student, and have been through Calc 3 and Differential Equations. It took me the longest time to figure out synthetic division so that I could help her, I felt like a total dumbass. What is the saying about being educated to the point of stupidity?
The same thing happens to me, I hate it.

I'm going into learning integration involving trig functions now...I can't remember for the life of me the basic properties of sin, cos, and tan, or some of their identities. Uggh...:mad:

Aurel, I liked the quadratic technique. It's one formula I haven't forgotten, I've had enough practice with it.

red-beard 02-06-2006 02:22 AM

In college we had to take 2 advanced Math courses beyond Differential Equations. The problem: they were taught by the Math department, which means they were taught by math geeks.

They expected that you remembered every stupid math trick taught since kindergarden. The Quadratic equation is burned into ROM, but a bunch of the math tricks taught in geometry? no.

stevepaa 02-06-2006 07:23 AM

Any old geometry ticks don't work that well in non-euclidean space where parallel lines are not always the same distance apart.:)

onewhippedpuppy 02-06-2006 08:03 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by yellowline
The same thing happens to me, I hate it.

I'm going into learning integration involving trig functions now...I can't remember for the life of me the basic properties of sin, cos, and tan, or some of their identities. Uggh...:mad:

Aurel, I liked the quadratic technique. It's one formula I haven't forgotten, I've had enough practice with it.

Pick up one of those laminated trigonometry cheat sheets, it will have most of the basic equations, unit circle, etc. I picked one up at Barnes & Noble, it saved my ass in Calc 2. I was going back to school after a long hiatus, my trig class was literally 10 years before my Calc 2, and they expected us to remember everything. Uh, no.

vash 02-06-2006 08:10 AM

i would/should be fired without my HP48GX. i own two of them.

Jims5543 02-06-2006 08:27 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by vash
i would/should be fired without my HP48GX. i own two of them.
LOL!!

I keep mumbling to myself as I help my son that computers do his now. Its good to know the mechanics of the problem but, in all honesty, if I caught any of my employees skiping the computer to do it the old fashioned way they would be in trouble.

I know it is important for him to understand this so I persevere.

stevepaa 02-06-2006 08:38 AM

Actually, I think you would want someone to think that way, lest he forget to change from rad to degree when he is doing an arc sine problem.

MotoSook 02-06-2006 08:52 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by LubeMaster77
Here's one that made my son go nuts for 30 minutes.

"OK Max, what is 1+1 equal."

"Dad, thats so easy, its 2!"

"Nope, it's 3 or 1 but not two. Heres an example. Lets say I'm 1 and Mommy is 1. When you added us up we had you which made it another 1 or 3 total!"

"Dad, thats...hay, how'd you do that?"

I did straighten him out but only after having him think it through.

Our 9 year old came home with math homework and mom wasn't touching it....they were learning the metric system.

After I got him to learn milllimeters, centimeters and meters, I asked what a decimeter is. Puzzled look from the young Timmy. So I humorously screamed at mom for making us move to an overly expensive school system where teachers overlooked such a thing...

...then I continued to teach Timmy the decimal system. At the end of the lesson, Timmy remarked, "I can't wait to tell my teacher what a decimeter is!" Mom and I got a good giggle.

The next morning, Timmy comes downstairs and exclaims, "Souk! quiz me on millimeters!" While putting on his coat to got to the bus stop he's singing, "I know millimeters...I know millimeters." :D

Jim...If I ever loss my HP, it would be a very very sad day in my life :D

M.D. Holloway 02-06-2006 09:51 AM

I use cc, mg, kg, lit, kl, mm and cm but as for anything else - nope - hectometer? decimeter? gagometer? wtfometer...

masraum 02-06-2006 10:10 AM

here, here for a few years of non-public schooling as a primer. I was in a private parochial school in Pensacola for the 5-7th grade and half of the 8th grade. I remember how to diagram sentences, I remember all of the metric prefixs from kilo-pico and usually guess right on the stuff above kilo.

I don't however remember the capitals of every country and state in the world.

I guess having mandatory "Bible" class, chapel every Wed and Fri, and a grade for penmanship that often kept me off of the honor roll was good for something.

onewhippedpuppy 02-06-2006 10:18 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by vash
i would/should be fired without my HP48GX. i own two of them.
You too? I'm still figuring out new cool stuff on my 49G+, too bad the UI sucks. I can't count how much time I've spent on the HP website reading through the manual.

teenerted1 02-06-2006 10:21 AM

sorry cant help you on any HS math

quarters w/vodka at lunch doesnt lead to staying awake during 6th period algebra.http://www.pelicanparts.com/support/smileys/fles.gif :cool:

red-beard 02-06-2006 03:38 PM

"I hate Numbers. There's like too many of them, and stuff."

snowman 02-06-2006 06:40 PM

I have my trusty old slip sticks. One in Aluminum the other in Mahogony, both give the same answers. If I really get desperate theres the HP41CV, and finally the handy PC. Then for REAL math problems theres the REAL computers, starting at 128 bits for good precision. Gimme a break math hasn't changed for a zillion years. If you learned it in 1906 or 2006 its still the same. Unlike politics. And SUPRIZE!! the 128 bit computer gives exactly the same answer as the slip sticks do.


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