Answer the question they ACTUALLY asked
(not the one you THOUGHT they asked)
I was working with a student this week on the ACT. He missed this question, not because he doesn’t know how to solve it, but because of a “silly” error.
Unforced errors are a huge problem. My kids lose more points from “silly” errors that all other error types combined (including not knowing how to solve a problem).
When I asked him how he was going to fix the problem he said that he would “try harder” and “read the question more carefully.” But in the heat of the test, good intentions go out the window.
Here’s a better tactic that prevents the majority of silly errors from happening in the first place.
The video explanation
You can watch the video or read the blog post.
Lots of triangles
The question asked what is the area of triangle ABC?
C. was rushing because he wanted to answer all the questions, so he assumed it was the first triangle he saw – triangle ADC.
![blue triangle](https://www.stellarscores.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/blue-triangle-300x225.png)
Mark up the picture, part 1
But they were asking about triangle ABC. An easy trick to just to mark up the picture with what the question is asking for. If he would have done so he would have gotten the point.
OUTLINE the triangle they are asking about. (After all, there are three different triangles they could have asked about)
What’s your sign?
Mark up the picture, part 2
![mark up the angle and legs on the triangle](https://www.stellarscores.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/cob-b-3-300x208.jpg)
Then he could write out the formula SOHCAHTOA to remind himself of the trig formulas. From here it’s easy to see that cosine B is a/15.
Now he needs to solve for side a. He could use the Pythagorean theorem. OR he could look at the triangle and recognize that it is a 3:4:5 triangle.
![Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/262580118/d63e45f99b Answer the question they asked (not the one you THOUGHT they asked) Tactics (or a solid strategy) beat good intentions every day of the week! Related to {{LINK}} drawing a picture is this tip: showing your work. I've talked about unforced errors {{LINK}} before - where you lose points not because you didn't know how to solve the question, but because you made a "silly" mistake (There are no "silly" mistakes) {{LINK TO BLOG POST???}} Here's an easy fix/ tactic that prevents the majority of silly errors from happening. I was working with a student this week on the ACT. He missed Kid: C. missed this question, not because he doesn't know how to solve it but because of a "silly" error. Or a non-forced error. Or a I-wasn't-paying-attention error. My kids lose more points from "silly" errors that all other error types combined (including not knowing how to solve a problem) {H2} Lots of triangles The question asked what is the area of triangle ABC? C. was rushing because he wanted to answer all the questions, so he assumed it was the first triangle he saw - triangle ADC. {H2} Mark up the picture But they were asking about triangle ABC. An easy trick to just to mark up the picture with what the question is asking for. If he would have done so he would have gotten the point. OUTLINE the triangle they are asking about. (After all, there are three different triangles they could have asked about) {H2} What's your sign? The very next question asked what is the cosine of B. My student knew that cosine is adjacent over hypotenuse. He looked over at the graph, saw the 12 and the 15, and said, "Ah. 12/15 must be the cosine." What he missed was that 12 is on the opposite leg to angle B, not the adjacent leg to angle B. {H2} Mark up the picture As soon as he saw the question was asking about angle B, he could go to the picture, mark angle B, and also mark the adjacent, opposite and hypotenuse legs. Then he could write out the formula SOHCAHTOA to remind himself of the trig formulas. From here it's easy to see that cosine B is a/15. Now he needs to solve for side a. He could use the Pythagorean theorem. OR he could look at the triangle and recognize that it is a 3:4:5 triangle. He can recognize that the multiplier is 3 and the side a is the side of 3. So the length of a is 3x3=9. So therefore the cosine of B is 9/15. Solid tactics beat strategies every day of the week. Remember to mark up your picture so you will answer the question they actually asked (not the question you thought they asked.)](https://www.stellarscores.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/cos-b-5-214x300.jpg)
![recognize a 3:4:5 triangle](https://www.stellarscores.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/cos-b-6-300x266.jpg)
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