Thinking skills assessment test

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves a scenario where Sally is helping her father with fishing, specifically calculating the number of worms needed based on his fishing habits and the number of casts he makes. The context is related to logical reasoning and arithmetic calculations in a real-world application.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss different interpretations of the problem, including how to account for the number of casts and the replacement of worms. There are varying calculations presented regarding the total number of worms needed based on different assumptions about the time spent at each pool and the casting frequency.

Discussion Status

Multiple interpretations of the problem are being explored, with some participants offering calculations that lead to different answers. There is no explicit consensus on the correct approach, but guidance is being shared regarding how to think through the problem.

Contextual Notes

Participants are considering the implications of the time spent at each pool and how that affects the total number of worms needed. There is mention of potential trickiness in the problem, indicating a need for careful consideration of the wording and assumptions involved.

ponjavic
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So I'm trying out the test to prepare me for my upcoming cambridge interview, there is one problem I can't understand though this one:

44 Sally is helping her father dig worms for fishing.
"That's exactly enough," he says as she places a worm in his tin.
"How many do you need?" she enquires.
"I use 4 worms on my hook and reckon on having to replace an average of one of these
each time I cast. I cast 12 times an hour. Today I will fish 5 pools spending an hour at
the first 4 and an hour and a half at the fifth. I always discard the worms on my hook
when walking between pools."
How many worms are in the tin?
A 66
B 69
C 81
D 86
E 264

I reckon it is D since:
He passes five pools thus 4*5 worms should be placed on the hook.
He spends a total of 5.5 hours at the pools netting 12*5.5=66 throws --> 66 worms.
66+20=86 worms

It is possible that they mean an hour total on the first four pools in this case:
Passes five pools = 20.
spends 2.5 hours casting = 12*2.5=30 casts --> 30 worms.
20+30=50 worms.

According to the answer sheet the answer is C. It should have something to do with 5 pools since 86-5=81 but what?
 
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It seems rather simple to me but here I go, well the awnser is 81 because the first cast he does not have to change the worm, so that's actually 11 replaced worms he does in an hour, and 17 on an hour and a half. So 4worms*5pools=20, 11replacedworms*4pools=44, 17replaced worms for the last pool, and then 44+17+20=81. :smile:
hope you understood me. :-p
 
yep that was where i gained the other five, that's a mean question then, hope I can keep my nerves together at the test :bugeye:
 
Lets hope so, just think problems 2 times in these kinds of things, they usually try to trick you. :wink:
 

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