Q:

Kelly took a quiz on decimals that had 151515 questions. She got \dfrac45 5 4 ? start fraction, 4, divided by, 5, end fraction of those questions correct. She took another quiz on fractions that had 121212 questions. She got \dfrac56 6 5 ? start fraction, 5, divided by, 6, end fraction of those questions correct. On which quiz did Kelly get more questions correct?

Accepted Solution

A:
Answer:She had more correct answers on the first quizExplanation:1- For the first quiz:We know that the quiz had a total of 15 questions and that Kelly had [tex]\frac{4}{5}[/tex] of those correctThis means that:Number of correct answers = [tex]\frac{4}{5}*15 = 12[/tex] answers2- For the second quiz:We know that the quiz had a total of 12 questions and that Kelly had [tex]\frac{5}{6}[/tex] of those correctThis means that:Number of correct answers = [tex]\frac{5}{6}*12=10[/tex] answers3- Comparing the number of correct answers:From the above calculations, we know that she had 12 correct answers on the first quiz and 10 on the secondThis means that she had more correct answers on the first quizHope this helps :)