I found a little math problem from an old selective school test. Let's see if you smart kids out there can solve this grade 5-6 problem. If you cannot, perhaps you need tutoring, otherwise you just do well by self-learning
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Anna walks to school in 20 minutes. Anna can cycle to the school in 5 minutes. How much faster can Anna cycle than walk?
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This was a real question. The wording was so confusing in this sentence "How much faster can Anna cycle than walk?". So I rewrite the question to make it completely clear. This is the question I'd like people to try.
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Anna walks to school in 20 minutes. Anna can cycle to the school in 5 minutes. How many times faster can Anna cycle than walk?
I gave this question to many people in Australia and the USA on answers.yahoo.com, most of the adults and kids failed to solve it properly. So be warned, it's not as naive as it looks even after I have removed the English ambiguity from it. It's an algebraic question requiring critical thinking even though it looks like a very plain every day kiddy problem.
Have fun!
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Anna walks to school in 20 minutes. Anna can cycle to the school in 5 minutes. How much faster can Anna cycle than walk?
---
This was a real question. The wording was so confusing in this sentence "How much faster can Anna cycle than walk?". So I rewrite the question to make it completely clear. This is the question I'd like people to try.
---
Anna walks to school in 20 minutes. Anna can cycle to the school in 5 minutes. How many times faster can Anna cycle than walk?
I gave this question to many people in Australia and the USA on answers.yahoo.com, most of the adults and kids failed to solve it properly. So be warned, it's not as naive as it looks even after I have removed the English ambiguity from it. It's an algebraic question requiring critical thinking even though it looks like a very plain every day kiddy problem.
Have fun!