No, I don't think so. I think you're meaning questions that you have to choose true/false and a justification to a stimulus with percentages
e.g. plane 1 has a 40% failing test A and 30% chance of succeeding test B.. plane 2 has a 50% chance failing test A and 75% chance of failing test B -...
Yep - I don't think you'll get docked marks. There usually is a set marking criteria for short/long response questions in the HSC and if you add extra information (which could be wrong) you wouldn't lose nor receive extra marks.
That said, for maths subjects, if you write like two different...
If a pattern occurs for all 12 squares (6 squares in set A and set B), do we usually disregard it?
e.g. a common example: say all squares have say 4 shapes inside them, whilst Set A has a circle in the middle and Set B has a triangle in the bottom left corner.
Answer says that a shape with just...
hi rubbishbear
im sorry for replying super late (but better very late than never) - i agree ar is super hard - very hit or miss
ill give you hints for the patterns
1. counting total _ is different between sets
2. set a + set b -
open spoilers if you want full solutions - just gonna let you...
visualisation
For question 44, the answer explanation was that first we find the proportion of men and women who can hear using the ratio in the table:
i.e.
for men = 100000 x 21/139 = ~15108
for women = 100000 x 30/102 = ~29412
and then calculate the percentages of these hearing adults who...
Hope everyone's ucat prep is going great - I've just started school holidays and realised that I'm crap at UCAT after doing some timed tests (I've been doing mainly just untimed practise questions so far which was a BIG mistake), and my exam is approaching at a rapid rate on Mon Jul 3 (10 days...
Answers recorded in pencil - I'm not really sure how to integrate in order to find the probabilities for both.
Could someone please shoot some hints my way on how to solve these two questions?
Thanks in advance!
Hi - don't know where to start for i). The solution we were given involved =k( /a + /b) which contains unit vectors, which I don't really get. I know that we can't just equate k to c, because that would mean that c is a+b which is wrong as question does not imply a rhombus.
Thanks in advance...
anu automatically uploaded my yr 12 details but didn't with yr 11 details - and i can't progress with my application. How do i solve this?
I'm awaiting an email from ANU about this issue, but if there is a fast response I'd love to hear it. Thanks!
Is this possible to be solved using direct proof? From MANSW chal q
Also, what do you begin to consider in general with proof questions with primes or factorials in them?
By expanding the left-hand side, show that \left(1+2z+3z^{2}+4z^{3}+5z^{4}+...+nz^{n-1}\right)\left(z-1\right)=n where z is an nth root of unity, n≠1
I noticed that it looked like a differential, and if you integrate it you get \left(1+z^{2}+z^{3}+z^{4}+...+z^{n}\right)=\int_{ }^{...
What scholarships can I get if I were to do bmed MD at UNSW OR Monash (High school leaver)? Not anything sports/music related, indigenous/lowSES/rural/female. Anything else (academic, cocurricular, leadership etc) is appreciated.
I would get actually hella fomo and focus would slowly spiral away if all of my friends were out relaxing and celebrating and i still had a week of HSC study left
i'd just turn off all socials to be safe
Firstly, it's definitely not too late on the internal exam front. Hint, you probably have heavier-weighted assessments and trials coming up that will definitely outbalance your past exams if you do well.
Secondly, even if you fail internals, having a good HSC examination mark (which accounts...
lowkey I think i'd get more confident as the weeks go on - forcing myself to get more sleep than pre-exam days as well...
just happy that English is first as always (good to see NESA behaving as it should), to get it done and over with fr