0 like 0 dislike
0 like 0 dislike
My exam of arithmetic for a Job is in 2 days without calculator. I want to learn in shortcut easy manner tricks of chapters l

1 Answer

0 like 0 dislike
0 like 0 dislike
If it is in two days I wouldn’t bother much with tricks and the sorts. My advice is to find problems that are as similar as possible to the ones you will see on the test, and do as many of them as you can. Make sure that they have answers and ideally, solutions. I’d try to simulate the time intensity as well, maybe do two practice rounds where you time yourself for 50 questions, mimicing the exam.

If you still fancy some tricks and stuff, check out the ones you might find in practice material for GMAT or GRE.

Related questions

0 like 0 dislike
0 like 0 dislike
11 answers
kuitenbrouwer asked Jun 21, 2022
At Coaching Actuaries, we're updating our videos to bring you even better content. But that also means we need to retire a few of Coach K's classic outfits. Enjoy this (s...
kuitenbrouwer asked Jun 21, 2022
0 like 0 dislike
0 like 0 dislike
5 answers
ChrisBeckmann asked Jun 21, 2022
Springer has made a bunch of Graduate Texts in Mathematics free to download
ChrisBeckmann asked Jun 21, 2022
0 like 0 dislike
0 like 0 dislike
4 answers
4thandorange asked Jun 21, 2022
which of these two will be better for a high schooler who wants to be a mathematician, Calculus(Michael Spivak) or A Course in pure mathematics(G.H Hardy)
4thandorange asked Jun 21, 2022
0 like 0 dislike
0 like 0 dislike
1 answer
TEDxJAX asked Jun 21, 2022
I’m trying to find a pdf version of Haese’s Mathematics for Australia 11 Mathematical Methods. I’m in high school and would love electronic copies of this and the y...
TEDxJAX asked Jun 21, 2022
by TEDxJAX
0 like 0 dislike
0 like 0 dislike
3 answers
MichaelDoudna asked Jun 21, 2022
Recent grad of BSc Mathematics and want to work through a book on data science while I look for a job in that sector. What's ideal?
MichaelDoudna asked Jun 21, 2022

33.4k questions

135k answers

0 comments

33.7k users

OhhAskMe is a math solving hub where high school and university students ask and answer loads of math questions, discuss the latest in math, and share their knowledge. It’s 100% free!