ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Linear Equations Videos 21 videos
It's a-me, Shmario! Get this question about linear equations correct and you'll be one step closer to finding Shmrincess Shmeach. Get it wrong and...
SAT Math 1.1 Algebra and Functions. Find an algebraic equation to correspond with the data.
SAT Math 1.3 Algebra and Functions. How many 16 oz. bottles did she buy?
SAT Math 4.4 Algebra and Functions 197 Views
Share It!
Description:
SAT Math 4.4 Algebra and Functions
Transcript
- 00:02
This question might blow the shmoopiest right off your head.
- 00:06
A family has three children.
- 00:08
The sum of the ages of the two youngest children is equal to the age of the oldest child.
- 00:14
In six years, the youngest child will be half the age of the oldest child,
- 00:19
and the middle child will be 18.
Full Transcript
- 00:21
What is the current age of the oldest child?
- 00:23
And here are the potential answers…
- 00:27
Okay, so we’re given a bunch of info about these three young ruffians,
- 00:31
and we need to use it to find the current age of the oldest kid.
- 00:34
Let’s start by assigning some variables.
- 00:37
We can assign x to the age of the youngest child, and y to the age of the middle child.
- 00:41
So, we know that x plus y is the age of the oldest child.
- 00:45
We know that in six years, the youngest child will be half the age of the oldest child.
- 00:50
Let’s try to write this in mathematical terms.
- 00:53
The age of the youngest child will be x plus six.
- 00:56
The age of the oldest child will be x plus y plus six.
- 00:59
Since the youngest child will be half the oldest child’s age, we can write:
- 01:04
two times the quantity x plus six equals x plus y plus six.
- 01:11
This simplifies into two x plus twelve equals x plus y plus six.
- 01:22
Finally, we can rewrite this as x equals y minus six.
- 01:27
We know that in six years the middle child will be eighteen years old.
- 01:31
We can write this as y plus six equals eighteen.
- 01:35
If we subtract six from both sides, we see that y equals twelve.
- 01:40
Now we can plug this value for y into our equation for x, x equals y minus six, to find
- 01:46
that x equals twelve minus six, or six.
- 01:50
The oldest child’s age is x plus y, so we can
- 01:53
plug in our values of x and y to find that the oldest child’s age is eighteen.
- 01:59
The answer is (D).
Related Videos
SAT Math 10.1 Geometry and Measurement. How many cans of paint are needed?
In 2014, the unemployment rate of one county in California was 7%. In another county, the unemployment rate was 11%. Which of the following express...
Angela is making cookies for a bake sale. She expects each batch of her cookies to sell for $40. It costs her $10 to make one batch of cookies, and...
Liz leaves her home to drive on a straight highway that leads directly across town for a job interview. At 8:00 a.m., she has driven 5 miles from h...
Bruce runs at a pace of one mile per 10 minutes. If he pauses for a five-minute break at the end of each mile, how many miles can Bruce run in 1 ho...