🚨Double points alert!🚨
Test your SAT math knowledge with this quiz. This challenge is inspired by the SAT-style math, designed to test your problem-solving and quantitative reasoning skills.
From ratios to algebra, geometry to angles, and graphs, here you’ll find a bit of everything. 🧮
This math quiz with answers features 24 questions covering real-world word problems, algebra, advanced math, and geometry. 📈📚
Whether you’re brushing up on skills, practicing for an upcoming exam, or wondering if this could be your opportunity to (finally) learn math, you’re in the right place. The only secret to ace this quiz? 🔑 Give your guesses a second – or a third – look before choosing the right answer.
Be ready to test your math skills… Let’s see how many you can get right! 🧠📐
🚀 💡 Want more or looking for something else? Head over to the Bored Panda Quizzes and explore our full collection of quizzes and trivia designed to test your knowledge, reveal hidden insights, and spark your curiosity.💡 🚀
Image credits: Karola G
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| User | Result | Reward |
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| / 24 | |
| / 24 | |
Not fair man, it’s just not fair that Americans get such easy questions for applying to college while I’m over here struggling with all these weird questions they ask for minor exams. I guess I’d have an easier time applying to colleges in US by writing the SAT than writing JEE-Advanced and applying in my country. This wasn’t even challenging
Don't worry. The real SAT questions are much more challenging than these.
Load More Replies...I just got luck on one of these, the quadratic graph one, and a couple of others really tested me - couldn't remember the exact equation for the pyramid, so picked the one that seemed closest to my best guess.
That was the only one that I got wrong, and only because I clicked the value for a and not b. I don't remember doing intersections between parabolas and lines in school - only with the axis.
Load More Replies...I severely struggled with math all through my basic school years but that was because my parents started me in school a year before I should have started, so I was emotionally immature and not developmentally ready to begin kindergarten at age four. Then in my college years, begun in my mid-twenties when I joined the U.S. Navy (1979) at age twenty-four I excelled at math because my cognitive skills had fully developed. Today at age seventy-one I enjoy keeping up with math as an armchair and hobby study. My score on this quiz: 21/24.
I had the same problem. I was started in kindergarten at 4 years old and I was never able to do any math until I went to community college in my twenties and I had to start completely over. I didn't know how to divide fractions, do percentages, or do decimals either. But a lot of that was problems at home, too. When you have problems at home, school is just like so much bad music - you just tune it out. So I flunked 1st grade math all the way up to high school algebra and beyond.
Load More Replies...Considering I hate formulas, studied in different country (so some of the problems are unknown for me) and out of school for 25 years... I am relatively happy with my 19/25. From doublechecking, I could have done 2 or 3 more correctly, if more focused (read: after my first coffee), but 3 were totally out of my scope or out of my memory.
I never took classes in geometry or statistics or anything to do with ratios in school, so all the ratio ones I got wrong (I still can't figure out why), but the geometry ones were pretty easy to figure out. Most of the others I remembered from doing algebra in college. BTW, I flunked math from 1st grade on (yes, they graduated me from high school) and I didn't do any math again until I was in college at age 25, starting over with basic arithmetic.
As someone who used to get paid to write questions for the SAT and the GRE (Graduate Record Exam), I can tell you that if I turned in these questions, many would be rejected and a few are so bad they might have gotten me fired. And their answer to #4 is definitely wrong. (The right answer is 8:7.)
The question now is What is the ratio of the number of highway miles to the total number of miles, which is definitely 7:8.
Load More Replies...Not fair man, it’s just not fair that Americans get such easy questions for applying to college while I’m over here struggling with all these weird questions they ask for minor exams. I guess I’d have an easier time applying to colleges in US by writing the SAT than writing JEE-Advanced and applying in my country. This wasn’t even challenging
Don't worry. The real SAT questions are much more challenging than these.
Load More Replies...I just got luck on one of these, the quadratic graph one, and a couple of others really tested me - couldn't remember the exact equation for the pyramid, so picked the one that seemed closest to my best guess.
That was the only one that I got wrong, and only because I clicked the value for a and not b. I don't remember doing intersections between parabolas and lines in school - only with the axis.
Load More Replies...I severely struggled with math all through my basic school years but that was because my parents started me in school a year before I should have started, so I was emotionally immature and not developmentally ready to begin kindergarten at age four. Then in my college years, begun in my mid-twenties when I joined the U.S. Navy (1979) at age twenty-four I excelled at math because my cognitive skills had fully developed. Today at age seventy-one I enjoy keeping up with math as an armchair and hobby study. My score on this quiz: 21/24.
I had the same problem. I was started in kindergarten at 4 years old and I was never able to do any math until I went to community college in my twenties and I had to start completely over. I didn't know how to divide fractions, do percentages, or do decimals either. But a lot of that was problems at home, too. When you have problems at home, school is just like so much bad music - you just tune it out. So I flunked 1st grade math all the way up to high school algebra and beyond.
Load More Replies...Considering I hate formulas, studied in different country (so some of the problems are unknown for me) and out of school for 25 years... I am relatively happy with my 19/25. From doublechecking, I could have done 2 or 3 more correctly, if more focused (read: after my first coffee), but 3 were totally out of my scope or out of my memory.
I never took classes in geometry or statistics or anything to do with ratios in school, so all the ratio ones I got wrong (I still can't figure out why), but the geometry ones were pretty easy to figure out. Most of the others I remembered from doing algebra in college. BTW, I flunked math from 1st grade on (yes, they graduated me from high school) and I didn't do any math again until I was in college at age 25, starting over with basic arithmetic.
As someone who used to get paid to write questions for the SAT and the GRE (Graduate Record Exam), I can tell you that if I turned in these questions, many would be rejected and a few are so bad they might have gotten me fired. And their answer to #4 is definitely wrong. (The right answer is 8:7.)
The question now is What is the ratio of the number of highway miles to the total number of miles, which is definitely 7:8.
Load More Replies...


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