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View Quote Too hard for you, apparently. No way that line crosses (0,0) |
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Quoted: Dirk dug a hole that is 10 feet deep. How can you represent the magnitude of the hole's depth? a). 10 b). -10 c). |10| d). |-10 View Quote Absolute value is always positive, so C is the most correct answer. |
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Quoted: For starters the || lines mean “absolute value” of whatever’s inside. That means |10| = |-10|, so we can toss out C & D. That leaves A or B. I’m going with A because, while on a graph you can have negative magnitude… no one measures holes as “negative feet”. That’s just dumb. View Quote That not how math is taught. They want you to show the correct process, as well as derive the correct answer. D is the correct choice. |
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View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Tell her to ask the teacher to solve 3x+1. Why is that hard? https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/31267/3X_1-2284935.png Do you even “y=mx+b”, bro? |
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Quoted:
Dumb questions are dumb. The hole is 10 feet deep. Tell the court recorder to use whatever notation she likes to indicate that the hole is 10 feet deep. The purpose of math is to express things as clearly as possible. If you have people arguing, saying multiple answers are identical, then you're asking questions in a stupid manner. Long story short, a kid would probably learn more by going out in the yard and digging a 10 foot hole than he would by sitting down and answering that question. View Quote |
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Meanwhile the school is teaching magnitude and shit OP's daughter is over here wondering how to do her taxes.
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Tell your daughter that it's her fault for sliding off the icy driveway causing |-$10,000| in damages and file a claim with her insurance for the buried electrical line in the |-10| foot hole.
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Quoted: Tell your daughter that it's her fault for sliding off the icy driveway causing |-$10,000| in damages and file a claim with her insurance for the buried electrical line in the |-10| foot hole. View Quote Attached File |
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Using test taking skills alone: A,C, & D are all mathematically the same. Therefore the logical answer is B
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Quoted: Quoted: |-10| is likely what the teacher lady is asking. But A, C, and D are all valid end answers in my opinion. This. A==C==D. If it truly is math. Jesus. Tittyfucking. Christ. 10 = |10| = |-10|. This is simple. This math class, book, and teacher are all very likely fucked and stupid in all sorts of ways. The actual math of this is simple. |
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Better equation is:
Johnny has 10 guns, the ATF confiscates the 10 guns, how many guns does Johnny have? |
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Just to provide an engineering example of where absolute value would be used. The acceptable error in a gauge, say on a pressure gauge in a petrochemical application, would be the absolute value of the difference between the correct reading and the gauge reading. You might see it expressed as 1% error, but that means the difference can be positive or negative.
So, you know, the absolute value of the difference. |
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And they wonder why kids are shitty at math it's bc retards get put in positions to makeup questions like this where more time is spent trying to fuigure out wtf they're asking for rather than the kid showing mastery of the concept.
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Quoted: I’m an engineer and I’ve never seen “|X|” Seems fucky for no other purpose than being fucky. But I’ve been wrong before. Once. View Quote https://linux.die.net/man/3/abs https://linux.die.net/man/3/fabs https://docs.python.org/3.10/library/functions.html#abs |
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Quoted: That not how math is taught. They want you to show the correct process, as well as derive the correct answer. D is the correct choice. View Quote Mhily hell this sounds so stupid it’s probably correct. ‘The answer is what you’re supposed to write out to be correct. Not the actual answer to the question, but the process in which you go through to achieve the answer to the question.’ |
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All I know is that pic shows a good place to store a commie
And I suck at math. |
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I love GD. We complain about Common Core and how stupid teachers, Millennials, and Boomers are yet 64% of you didn't answer A and are therefore wrong. When I was a TA grading lab reports I would have taken off points for any answer other than A. A is correct. Yes, others are equivalent but you ALWAYS give the most simplified answer unless otherwise stated. Square root of 100 is technically correct but if you gave that as the depth of a hole I'd ignore you.
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In my opinion, A or C would be correct. The term 'depth' implies distance below the surface. Thus positive depth is towards the center of the earth. If the question would have asked about the magnitude of differential altitude, then A or D would have been OK.
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Can't help but chuckle a bit that a bunch of adults have gone through 4 pages and still don't have a consensus.
I still maintain the easy answer is the most likely '10'. Is it possible that there is more than 1 answer and that teacher is laughing his/her ass off? |
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Quoted: Can't help but chuckle a bit that a bunch of adults have gone through 4 pages and still don't have a consensus. I still maintain the easy answer is the most likely '10'. Is it possible that there is more than 1 answer and that teacher is laughing his/her ass off? View Quote 6th grade teachers aren't smart enough to laugh at something like that. Never ascribe to malice what is adequately explained by incompetence. |
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I would say A, but it's one of those questions that it could be any of the above depending on context
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Quoted: 6th grade teachers aren't smart enough to laugh at something like that. Never ascribe to malice what is adequately explained by incompetence. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Can't help but chuckle a bit that a bunch of adults have gone through 4 pages and still don't have a consensus. I still maintain the easy answer is the most likely '10'. Is it possible that there is more than 1 answer and that teacher is laughing his/her ass off? 6th grade teachers aren't smart enough to laugh at something like that. Never ascribe to malice what is adequately explained by incompetence. |
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Quoted: Absolute value is always positive, so C is the most correct answer. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Dirk dug a hole that is 10 feet deep. How can you represent the magnitude of the hole's depth? a). 10 b). -10 c). |10| d). |-10 Absolute value is always positive, so C is the most correct answer. A, C, and D are identical values so why did you single out C? |
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Quoted: I love GD. We complain about Common Core and how stupid teachers, Millennials, and Boomers are yet 64% of you didn't answer A and are therefore wrong. When I was a TA grading lab reports I would have taken off points for any answer other than A. A is correct. Yes, others are equivalent but you ALWAYS give the most simplified answer unless otherwise stated. Square root of 100 is technically correct but if you gave that as the depth of a hole I'd ignore you. View Quote The question is specific. What value "can" be used. That's a reading comprehension fail for you Sir. |
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Quoted: A quibble. "Now put the zero 3 feet from the opening. The depth is |(3 - 0) - (0-7)| = |10| = 10 feet." I would put that as |(3-0)| + |(0-7)| which evaluates to the same thing but clearer that you are adding two magnitudes. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Magnitude does not require "direction", it's a scalar number. Consider a number line, something a sixth grader recognizes. Dig a 10 foot deep hole. Put a number line divided in 1 foot segments in the hole aligned along its centerline. First, place zero at the opening of the hole at grade. The bottom of the hole is located at -10 feet on the number line. The depth is |-10|=10 feet. Put the zero on the number line at the bottom of the hole; the depth is |10| = 10 feet. Now put the zero 3 feet from the opening. The depth is |(3 - 0) - (0-7)| = |10| = 10 feet. 10 feet is a scalar value that is the magnitude of the depth in feet. The number line is not a unit vector, but there is only a tiny step needed to define a unit vector the same as the number line. A quibble. "Now put the zero 3 feet from the opening. The depth is |(3 - 0) - (0-7)| = |10| = 10 feet." I would put that as |(3-0)| + |(0-7)| which evaluates to the same thing but clearer that you are adding two magnitudes. In the method number lines are taught in olden times, direction along the line is applied; in this case move from 3 to 0, then 0 to -7 to count the magnitude. A sneaky vector as the direction is defined. It's not called a vector since sixth graders aren't quite ready, that would be a bit esoteric, and it's pointless for a generic hole that we're assuming is dug normal to a level grade. |
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Quoted: A, C, and D are identical values so why did you single out C? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Dirk dug a hole that is 10 feet deep. How can you represent the magnitude of the hole's depth? a). 10 b). -10 c). |10| d). |-10 Absolute value is always positive, so C is the most correct answer. A, C, and D are identical values so why did you single out C? Yeah, I'm curious too. If absolute values were always positive, such that writing |-$10| was not correct, why would the notation for absolute value exist at all? Might as well write $10 as it is simpler than writing |$10|, if you can never write |-$10| because it is wrong. |
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Quoted: The question is specific. What value "can" be used. That's a reading comprehension fail for you Sir. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I love GD. We complain about Common Core and how stupid teachers, Millennials, and Boomers are yet 64% of you didn't answer A and are therefore wrong. When I was a TA grading lab reports I would have taken off points for any answer other than A. A is correct. Yes, others are equivalent but you ALWAYS give the most simplified answer unless otherwise stated. Square root of 100 is technically correct but if you gave that as the depth of a hole I'd ignore you. The question is specific. What value "can" be used. That's a reading comprehension fail for you Sir. Silly boy. |
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Quoted: Yeah, I'm curious too. If absolute values were always positive, such that writing |-$10| was not correct, why would the notation for absolute value exist at all? Might as well write $10 as it is simpler than writing |$10|, if you can never write |-$10| because it is wrong. View Quote The entire point of asking about it in terms of "magnitude" is that magnitude is unitless and unsigned. As in the scalar part of a vector is where they are going. I think. I also think we're in a safe thread, wtf is op. |
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Quoted: The entire point of asking about it in terms of "magnitude" is that magnitude is unitless and unsigned. As in the scalar part of a vector is where they are going. I think. I also think we're in a safe thread, wtf is op. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Yeah, I'm curious too. If absolute values were always positive, such that writing |-$10| was not correct, why would the notation for absolute value exist at all? Might as well write $10 as it is simpler than writing |$10|, if you can never write |-$10| because it is wrong. The entire point of asking about it in terms of "magnitude" is that magnitude is unitless and unsigned. As in the scalar part of a vector is where they are going. I think. I also think we're in a safe thread, wtf is op. Here's the whole thing: 3. For each situation below, circle the best number model for the situation. a... b. Dirk dug a hole that is 10 feet deep. How can you represent the depth relative to ground level? 10 -10 |10| |-10| How can you represent the magnitude of the hole's depth? 10 -10 |10| |-10| For 3.b., it's obviously -10 for the first question because it doesn't ask for magnitude, and the next question does. The next question would be |-10| to show the magnitude: "For a hole which which has a depth below ground level (negative value), the depth (magnitude) of the hole is |-10|." It's slightly misleading of the OP to only post part of the problem (and in his other thread he posted part of 3.a., but it was the preceding part). I'm with you on 'safe thread'. |
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Answers from the answer book are here:. (it is a PDF)
https://harrisonmathclassroom.weebly.com/uploads/1/5/5/2/15525464/pg._205.pdf |
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Implausible. To dig 10 ft^3 would require 1 ft x 1ft, and no one makes a shovel that can do that. So they dug 10 ft down taking out 20 yards of dirt most likely. Permits, environmental impact for scrub jays and tortoise lairs, call before they dug and cut a sewer main? In FL, they'd hit water or limestone before 10 ft.
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The absolute value is the correct answer. I don’t understand if C
choice D could actually exist. |
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It has a value of 10. Just like it's stated in the 1st sentence. How many feet? 10
It's as simple as "who's buried in Grant's tomb?" |
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It doesn't matter what the answer is. Dirk is an obvious Caucasian name common in more rural areas. Who is Dirk planning on killing and burying in his 10' hole?
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Grade school math is stupid.
The hole is 10 feet deep, don’t over complicate it. Source: civil engineer |
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Quoted: Answers from the answer book are here:. (it is a PDF) https://harrisonmathclassroom.weebly.com/uploads/1/5/5/2/15525464/pg._205.pdf View Quote Attached File |
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