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Re: A test is scored out of 100 and the scores are divided into [#permalink]
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Explanation

Since the average is 7, use the average formula to find the sum of the scores in the class:
Average = Sum ÷ (# of terms)
7 = Sum ÷ 20

Sum = 140

At least one student got every possible score. There are eleven possible scores: 0 + 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5 + 6 + 7 + 8 + 9 + 10. This is an evenly spaced set, so calculate the sum by multiplying the average of the set by the number of terms in the set. The average is (10 + 0)/2 = 5 and the number of terms is 11, so the sum of the set is 5 × 11 = 55. Subtract this from the earlier sum; the remaining 9 students had to score 140 – 55 = 85 points.

Quantity A is asks for the lowest score that could have been received by more than one student. If 9 students scored a total of 85 points, and any one student could not score more than 10 points, then what is the lowest possible score that one of these 9 students could have received? In order to
minimize that number, maximize the numbers for the other students. If 8 students scored 10 points each, for a total of 80 points, then the 9th student must have scored exactly 5. Quantity A must be greater than Quantity B. Notice that the average score of 7 forces a lot of the scores to be 10 in order
to to balance out the very low scores of 0, 1, 2, etc., that are required in the class (at least one of each). The lowest score that could have been received by 2 students is 5, so Quantity A is 5.
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Re: A test is scored out of 100 and the scores are divided into [#permalink]
sandy wrote:
Explanation

Since the average is 7, use the average formula to find the sum of the scores in the class:
Average = Sum ÷ (# of terms)
7 = Sum ÷ 20

Sum = 140

At least one student got every possible score. There are eleven possible scores: 0 + 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5 + 6 + 7 + 8 + 9 + 10. This is an evenly spaced set, so calculate the sum by multiplying the average of the set by the number of terms in the set. The average is (10 + 0)/2 = 5 and the number of terms is 11, so the sum of the set is 5 × 11 = 55. Subtract this from the earlier sum; the remaining 9 students had to score 140 – 55 = 85 points.

Quantity A is asks for the lowest score that could have been received by more than one student. If 9 students scored a total of 85 points, and any one student could not score more than 10 points, then what is the lowest possible score that one of these 9 students could have received? In order to
minimize that number, maximize the numbers for the other students. If 8 students scored 10 points each, for a total of 80 points, then the 9th student must have scored exactly 5. Quantity A must be greater than Quantity B. Notice that the average score of 7 forces a lot of the scores to be 10 in order
to to balance out the very low scores of 0, 1, 2, etc., that are required in the class (at least one of each). The lowest score that could have been received by 2 students is 5, so Quantity A is 5.


Where did you obtain average = 7? Has the original question been changed? This reply does not seem to relate to the original post in any way. We are told no averages in the original post and it only refers to quintiles. The answer is listed as D.
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Re: A test is scored out of 100 and the scores are divided into [#permalink]
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Carcass wrote:
Quintiles (“fifths” of the data) define relative scores, not absolute scores. Imagine two possible score distributions:

For instance: The class’s scores are 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 (20% of the class scored each of these). In this case, adding up two lowest quintile students would be 1 + 1 = 2, which is less than 5.

For instance: The class’s scores are 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 (20% of the class scored each of these — still not so sharp!). In this case, adding up two lowest quintile students would be 10 + 10 = 20, which is greater than 14.

Thus, you cannot determine which quantity is larger.

The answer is D.

Regards



Thank you.
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Re: A test is scored out of 100 and the scores are divided into [#permalink]
Carcass wrote:
Quintiles (“fifths” of the data) define relative scores, not absolute scores. Imagine two possible score distributions:

For instance: The class’s scores are 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 (20% of the class scored each of these). In this case, adding up two lowest quintile students would be 1 + 1 = 2, which is less than 5.

For instance: The class’s scores are 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 (20% of the class scored each of these — still not so sharp!). In this case, adding up two lowest quintile students would be 10 + 10 = 20, which is greater than 14.

Thus, you cannot determine which quantity is larger.

The answer is D.

Regards



What does that mean " define relative scores, not absolute scores"?
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Re: A test is scored out of 100 and the scores are divided into [#permalink]
Asmakan wrote:
Carcass wrote:
Quintiles (“fifths” of the data) define relative scores, not absolute scores. Imagine two possible score distributions:

For instance: The class’s scores are 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 (20% of the class scored each of these). In this case, adding up two lowest quintile students would be 1 + 1 = 2, which is less than 5.

For instance: The class’s scores are 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 (20% of the class scored each of these — still not so sharp!). In this case, adding up two lowest quintile students would be 10 + 10 = 20, which is greater than 14.

Thus, you cannot determine which quantity is larger.

The answer is D.

Regards



What does that mean " define relative scores, not absolute scores"?


scores between 10-20 consider relative scores for example for the first group, while absolute scores are like the exact number like 20/21/22
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Re: A test is scored out of 100 and the scores are divided into [#permalink]
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