Hey everyone, I'm not sure about this question
Which of the following religious traditions had the greatest rate of membership increase
between 1991 and 1996?
Religious Affiliation in Australia
Buddhism: 1991 -- 139 795. 1996 -- 199 812
Christianity: 1991 -- 12 465 644. 1999 -- 12 582 764
Islam: 1991 -- 147 507. 1996 -- 200 885
Judaism: 1991 -- 74 266. 1996 -- 79 805
A) Buddhism
(B) Christianity
(C) Islam
(D) Judaism
The answer is A. But isn't a rate, in maths terms, the change of something over time? So the rate of increase would be, for say Islam, 200885 - 147507 divided by 5 (years) Doing it this way, the highest rate of increase is in Christianity. The only way I could come up with Buddhism having a higher number is dividing the 1996 number by the 1991 number. Maybe my maths just sucks. I know I'm making a bit of a deal out of things, but if they ask a question like this again I wanna know what's going on.
(P.s. this isn't my account, most of the time I'm cracker barrel)[/LEFT]
[/FONT]
edit: Damn, I can't make a table.
Which of the following religious traditions had the greatest rate of membership increase
between 1991 and 1996?
Religious Affiliation in Australia
Buddhism: 1991 -- 139 795. 1996 -- 199 812
Christianity: 1991 -- 12 465 644. 1999 -- 12 582 764
Islam: 1991 -- 147 507. 1996 -- 200 885
Judaism: 1991 -- 74 266. 1996 -- 79 805
A) Buddhism
(B) Christianity
(C) Islam
(D) Judaism
The answer is A. But isn't a rate, in maths terms, the change of something over time? So the rate of increase would be, for say Islam, 200885 - 147507 divided by 5 (years) Doing it this way, the highest rate of increase is in Christianity. The only way I could come up with Buddhism having a higher number is dividing the 1996 number by the 1991 number. Maybe my maths just sucks. I know I'm making a bit of a deal out of things, but if they ask a question like this again I wanna know what's going on.
(P.s. this isn't my account, most of the time I'm cracker barrel)[/LEFT]
[/FONT]
edit: Damn, I can't make a table.
Last edited: