Quizzes & Puzzles17 mins ago
A-Level Maths
27 Answers
Not that long ago, there was a thread on AB about an O-level maths question, with the general agreement that it was a very easy question to answer.
Well here is a question that is supposedly an A-level maths question that I would judge to be at the level to be expected of O-level. The solution is quite easy, but I would elevate it to O-level, in that it involves a modicum of thought in how to divide up the area under consideration to get to the solution.
If students entering university are unable to answer this question, either degree courses have been significantly dumbed-down, or they will seriously struggle with the syllabus.
https:/ /www.da ilymail .co.uk/ news/ar ticle-1 2169463 /GCSE-p upils-f ume-fie ndishly -diffic ult-mat hs-ques tion-Ed excel-e xam-pap er.html
Well here is a question that is supposedly an A-level maths question that I would judge to be at the level to be expected of O-level. The solution is quite easy, but I would elevate it to O-level, in that it involves a modicum of thought in how to divide up the area under consideration to get to the solution.
If students entering university are unable to answer this question, either degree courses have been significantly dumbed-down, or they will seriously struggle with the syllabus.
https:/
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Hymie. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I would imagine that pupils at the end of a fairly difficult Higher paper would look at the diagram and panic, they may not be able to simplify it down to just the middle area. I used to tell them to if possible add as much data as possible to the diagram, if the sides are labelled as 1 then it becomes more obvious. There has to be questions to stretch even the brightest on any exam paper.
Questions like this are "hard" in the sense that it can be easy to panic, or to lose focus, or to see the whole shape rather than how to break it up. Once you can see the four small triangles and the large square, it becomes perfectly manageable, but what makes it hard is being hit all at once with just one piece of info (a=1) and having to work out the rest. It's typical of an Edexcel-style question to do this, to test the problem-solving skills.
I don't think judging it outside an exam setting is quite fair. Agree that the solution in itself isn't A Level standard, but the ability to work through each step without "hand-holding" is.
I don't think judging it outside an exam setting is quite fair. Agree that the solution in itself isn't A Level standard, but the ability to work through each step without "hand-holding" is.