The problem is attached.
I think i get the answer to this conceptually. Can someone please walk me through the math involved in coming up with the answer to this problem?
The answer is C.
Thanks.
Anonymous Wrote:Statement 1 says.
(86/4850) + (Errors in B/Total # of customers in B)= 1.5/100
Anonymous Wrote:(Errors in B/Total # of customers in B) = .015 - .0177
guest612 Wrote:question,
can i potentially solve this wtd average problem as follows (i'd like to know if this is correct):
86(4850/14200)+x(9350/14200) = 1.5
Please tell me if the above equation is correct. x is the service errors for Division B and 14200 is the combined number of both Divs A + Divs B.
RPurewal Wrote:guest612 Wrote:question,
can i potentially solve this wtd average problem as follows (i'd like to know if this is correct):
86(4850/14200)+x(9350/14200) = 1.5
Please tell me if the above equation is correct. x is the service errors for Division B and 14200 is the combined number of both Divs A + Divs B.
no, you can't do that.
the left-hand side of this equation is set up as a 'weighted average' of 86 and x, weighted by the numbers of customers - an average that doesn't make sense in the first place, given that 86 and x are aggregate totals (it doesn't make any sense to average aggregate totals - the things for which weighted averages make sense are individual data points, such as test scores or temperatures).
moreover, the things you're trying to average on the left side aren't parallel to the right-hand quantity, which is a rate per 100 customers rather than an aggregate total.
see the posts above for what you actually can do on this problem.
RonPurewal Wrote:two things.
thing number one: BAD algebra errorAnonymous Wrote:Statement 1 says.
(86/4850) + (Errors in B/Total # of customers in B)= 1.5/100
nope.
actually, what it says is
(86 + errors in b) / (4850 + custs in b) = 1.5/100
you can't break off the 86/4850 from this fraction.
if you don't realize why this is a mistake, compare similar expressions that use nothing but integers: for example, (2 + 3)/(1 + 2) vs. 2/1 + 3/2.
in fact, these expressions will NEVER be equal.
--
thing number two: absurd final answerAnonymous Wrote:(Errors in B/Total # of customers in B) = .015 - .0177
dude!
0.015 - 0.0177 is negative!
obviously that's absurd, so it proves that you've done something wrong... and now, because we're awesome, you know what you did wrong.
know your fractions!
bgussin Wrote:Here, in this problem, why wouldn't the combined error rate simply be the combination of the individual error rates, described as #errors/customer?
kgopalncc Wrote:Can you solve the problem like this?
From question we know:
Division A has 4850 customers and 86 service errors.
We want to know the service error rate for every 100 customers in Division B.
4850/100 = 48.50
Service Error for Div. A is 86/48.50
St 1) Can be set up as (86 + Y)/(48.5 + X) = 1.5
Where X= Customers in Div. B / 100
Y= Service Errors in Div. B
We cannot solve this equation: INSUFF
St 2) Tells us the number of Customer in Div. B is 9350 but gives no info on Service Errors for Div. B : INSUFF
Together) We know (86 + Y)/(48.5 + X)= 1.5
and we know X= 9350/100 = 93.50
We can stop here since we know we can solve for Y and ultimately calculate Service Error rate for Div. B.