GreenlightTestPrep wrote:
At a certain school, the student to teacher ratio is 52 to 9. If 38 students and 11 teachers leave, which of the following COULD represent the number of students and teachers remaining at the school?
A) 532 students and 88 teachers
B) 794 students and 162 teachers
C) 1106 students and 225 teachers
D) 1418 students and 241 teachers
E) 1728 students and 295 teachers
Hint: One approach will allow you to solve the question in under 20 seconds.
There's a nice integer properties rule that says:
If j is a multiple of d, and k is NOT a multiple of d, then j-k (and j+k) is NOT a multiple of dFor example, since 56 is a multiple of 7, and 11 is NOT a multiple of 7, then 56-11 is NOT a multiple of 7
At a certain school, the student to teacher ratio is 52 to 9.So, some possible scenarios are as follows:
- there are 52 students and 9 teachers
- there are 104 students and 18 teachers
- there are 156 students and 27 teachers
etc
Notice that the number of students is always a multiple of 52.
Since 52 is a multiple of 4, we can also see that
the number of students is always a multiple of 4.
Also notice that
the number of teachers is always a multiple of 9.
38 students and 11 teachers leaveNotice that 38 is NOT a multiple of 4
And 11 is NOT a multiple of 9
By the above
property,
the REMAINING number of students is NOT a multiple of 4By the above
property,
the REMAINING number of teachers is NOT a multiple of 9Which of the following COULD represent the number of students and teachers remaining at the school?Since
the REMAINING number of students is NOT a multiple of 4, we can ELIMINATE answer choices A and E, since 532 and 1728 ARE multiples of 4
Since
the REMAINING number of teachers is NOT a multiple of 9, we can ELIMINATE answer choices B and C, since 162 and 225 ARE multiples of 9
By the process of elimination, the correct answer is D
Cheers,
Brent