brianjadams1 Wrote:This question arose while doing #D14 p. 22 OG; however, it is a more general question. The question says "The number of parents who volunteered was 1.5 times the number of parents who neither volunteered to supervise...nor volunteered to bring..." I’m consistently jacking up the setup of problems like these. Is it 1.5Pv=Pn? Or Pv=1.5Pn? I think in this case it’s Pv=1.5Pn, right? But is there a trick to getting the setup in questions like this correct? It’s an on-going problem I’ve had. Thanks!
V = Number of parents who volunteered
N = Number of parents who neither volunteered nor bring
WAS = Equal
V
= 1.5N
I used to struggle with opportunity cost, so if you're absolutely stuck, here's what I would do.
The way I read it, it's "For every parent who didn't (blah), there were 1.5 parents who did". So since it's "for every", you can write it as a ratio, and then re-arrange.
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To sum up, I think there's 2 ways you can express relationships. You can say.
X WAS (half/twice/z times) Y
X = (half/twice/z times) Y
or
For every Y, there is (half/twice/z times) of X
(X/Y)=(half/twice/z times)/1