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I used the official objectives and sample test to construct these questions, but cannot promise that they accurately reflect what’s on the real test. Some of the sample questions were more convoluted than I could bear to write. See terms of use. See the MTEL Practice Test main page to view questions on a particular topic or to download paper practice tests.
MTEL General Curriculum Mathematics Practice
Question 1 |
Which of the following is equal to eleven billion four hundred thousand?
\( \large 11,400,000\) Hint: That's eleven million four hundred thousand. | |
\(\large11,000,400,000\) | |
\( \large11,000,000,400,000\) Hint: That's eleven trillion four hundred thousand (although with British conventions; this answer is correct, but in the US, it isn't). | |
\( \large 11,400,000,000\) Hint: That's eleven billion four hundred million |
Question 2 |
The histogram below shows the frequency of a class's scores on a 4 question quiz.
What was the mean score on the quiz?
\( \large 2.75\) Hint: There were 20 students who took the quiz. Total points earned: \(2 \times 1+6 \times 2+ 7\times 3+5 \times 4=55\), and 55/20 = 2.75. | |
\( \large 2\) Hint: How many students are there total? Did you count them all? | |
\( \large 3\) Hint: How many students are there total? Did you count them all? Be sure you're finding the mean, not the median or the mode. | |
\( \large 2.5\) Hint: How many students are there total? Did you count them all? Don't just take the mean of 1, 2, 3, 4 -- you have to weight them properly. |
Question 3 |
Kendra is trying to decide which fraction is greater, \( \dfrac{4}{7}\) or \( \dfrac{5}{8}\). Which of the following answers shows the best reasoning?
\( \dfrac{4}{7}\) is \( \dfrac{3}{7}\)away from 1, and \( \dfrac{5}{8}\) is \( \dfrac{3}{8}\)away from 1. Since eighth‘s are smaller than seventh‘s, \( \dfrac{5}{8}\) is closer to 1, and is the greater of the two fractions. | |
\( 7-4=3\) and \( 8-5=3\), so the fractions are equal.Hint: Not how to compare fractions. By this logic, 1/2 and 3/4 are equal, but 1/2 and 2/4 are not. | |
\( 4\times 8=32\) and \( 7\times 5=35\). Since \( 32<35\) , \( \dfrac{5}{8}<\dfrac{4}{7}\)Hint: Starts out as something that works, but the conclusion is wrong. 4/7 = 32/56 and 5/8 = 35/56. The cross multiplication gives the numerators, and 35/56 is bigger. | |
\( 4<5\) and \( 7<8\), so \( \dfrac{4}{7}<\dfrac{5}{8}\)Hint: Conclusion is correct, logic is wrong. With this reasoning, 1/2 would be less than 2/100,000. |
Question 4 |
Here is a number trick:
1) Pick a whole number
2) Double your number.
3) Add 20 to the above result.
4) Multiply the above by 5
5) Subtract 100
6) Divide by 10
The result is always the number that you started with! Suppose you start by picking N. Which of the equations below best demonstrates that the result after Step 6 is also N?
\( \large N*2+20*5-100\div 10=N\) Hint: Use parentheses or else order of operations is off. | |
\( \large \left( \left( 2*N+20 \right)*5-100 \right)\div 10=N\) | |
\( \large \left( N+N+20 \right)*5-100\div 10=N\) Hint: With this answer you would subtract 10, instead of subtracting 100 and then dividing by 10. | |
\( \large \left( \left( \left( N\div 10 \right)-100 \right)*5+20 \right)*2=N\) Hint: This answer is quite backwards. |
Question 5 |
The student used a method that worked for this problem and can be generalized to any subtraction problem.Hint: Note that this algorithm is taught as the "standard" algorithm in much of Europe (it's where the term "borrowing" came from -- you borrow on top and "pay back" on the bottom). | |
The student used a method that worked for this problem and that will work for any subtraction problem that only requires one regrouping; it will not work if more regrouping is required.Hint: Try some more examples. | |
The student used a method that worked for this problem and will work for all three-digit subtraction problems, but will not work for larger problems.Hint: Try some more examples. | |
The student used a method that does not work. The student made two mistakes that cancelled each other out and was lucky to get the right answer for this problem.Hint: Remember, there are many ways to do subtraction; there is no one "right" algorithm. |
Question 6 |
The first histogram shows the average life expectancies for women in different countries in Africa in 1998; the second histogram gives similar data for Europe:
How much bigger is the range of the data for Africa than the range of the data for Europe?
0 yearsHint: Range is the maximum life expectancy minus the minimum life expectancy. | |
12 yearsHint: Are you subtracting frequencies? Range is about values of the data, not frequency. | |
18 yearsHint: It's a little hard to read the graph, but it doesn't matter if you're consistent. It looks like the range for Africa is 80-38= 42 years and for Europe is 88-64 = 24; 42-24=18. | |
42 yearsHint: Read the question more carefully. |
Question 7 |
The function d(x) gives the result when 12 is divided by x. Which of the following is a graph of d(x)?
![]() Hint: d(x) is 12 divided by x, not x divided by 12. | |
![]() Hint: When x=2, what should d(x) be? | |
![]() Hint: When x=2, what should d(x) be? | |
![]() |
Question 8 |
A cylindrical soup can has diameter 7 cm and height 11 cm. The can holds g grams of soup. How many grams of the same soup could a cylindrical can with diameter 14 cm and height 33 cm hold?
\( \large 6g\) Hint: You must scale in all three dimensions. | |
\( \large 12g\) Hint: Height is multiplied by 3, and diameter and radius are multiplied by 2. Since the radius is squared, final result is multiplied by \(2^2\times 3=12\). | |
\( \large 18g\) Hint: Don't square the height scale factor. | |
\( \large 36g\) Hint: Don't square the height scale factor. |
Question 9 |
Exactly one of the numbers below is a prime number. Which one is it?
\( \large511 \) Hint: Divisible by 7. | |
\( \large517\) Hint: Divisible by 11. | |
\( \large519\) Hint: Divisible by 3. | |
\( \large521\) |
Question 10 |
In March of 2012, 1 dollar was worth the same as 0.761 Euros, and 1 dollar was also worth the same as 83.03 Japanese Yen. Which of the expressions below gives the number of Yen that are worth 1 Euro?
\( \large {83}.0{3}\cdot 0.{761}\) Hint: This equation gives less than the number of yen per dollar, but 1 Euro is worth more than 1 dollar. | |
\( \large \dfrac{0.{761}}{{83}.0{3}}\) Hint: Number is way too small. | |
\( \large \dfrac{{83}.0{3}}{0.{761}}\) Hint: One strategy here is to use easier numbers, say 1 dollar = .5 Euros and 100 yen, then 1 Euro would be 200 Yen (change the numbers in the equations and see what works). Another is to use dimensional analysis: we want # yen per Euro, or yen/Euro = yen/dollar \(\times\) dollar/Euro = \(83.03 \times \dfrac {1}{0.761}\) | |
\( \large \dfrac{1}{0.{761}}\cdot \dfrac{1}{{83}.0{3}}\) Hint: Number is way too small. |
Question 11 |
The "houses" below are made of toothpicks and gum drops.
How many toothpicks are there in a row of 53 houses?
212Hint: Can the number of toothpicks be even? | |
213Hint: One way to see this is that every new "house" adds 4 toothpicks to the leftmost vertical toothpick -- so the total number is 1 plus 4 times the number of "houses." There are many other ways to look at the problem too. | |
217Hint: Try your strategy with a smaller number of "houses" so you can count and find your mistake. | |
265Hint: Remember that the "houses" overlap some walls. |
Question 12 |
Use the expression below to answer the question that follows.
\(\large \dfrac{\left( 155 \right)\times \left( 6,124 \right)}{977}\)
Which of the following is the best estimate of the expression above?
100Hint: 6124/977 is approximately 6. | |
200Hint: 6124/977 is approximately 6. | |
1,000Hint: 6124/977 is approximately 6. 155 is approximately 150, and \( 6 \times 150 = 3 \times 300 = 900\), so this answer is closest. | |
2,000Hint: 6124/977 is approximately 6. |
Question 13 |
Which of the following is closest to the height of a college student in centimeters?
1.6 cmHint: This is more the height of a Lego toy college student -- less than an inch! | |
16 cmHint: Less than knee high on most college students. | |
160 cmHint: Remember, a meter stick (a little bigger than a yard stick) is 100 cm. Also good to know is that 4 inches is approximately 10 cm. | |
1600 cmHint: This college student might be taller than some campus buildings! |
Question 14 |
The "houses" below are made of toothpicks and gum drops.
Which of the following does not represent the number of gumdrops in a row of h houses?
\( \large 2+3h\) Hint: Think of this as start with 2 gumdrops on the left wall, and then add 3 gumdrops for each house. | |
\( \large 5+3(h-1)\) Hint: Think of this as start with one house, and then add 3 gumdrops for each of the other h-1 houses. | |
\( \large h+(h+1)+(h+1)\) Hint: Look at the gumdrops in 3 rows: h gumdrops for the "rooftops," h+1 for the tops of the vertical walls, and h+1 for the floors. | |
\( \large 5+3h\) Hint: This one is not a correct equation (which makes it the correct answer!). Compare to choice A. One of them has to be wrong, as they differ by 3. |
Question 15 |
Use the four figures below to answer the question that follows:
How many of the figures pictured above have at least one line of reflective symmetry?
\( \large 1\) | |
\( \large 2\) Hint: The ellipse has 2 lines of reflective symmetry (horizontal and vertical, through the center) and the triangle has 3. The other two figures have rotational symmetry, but not reflective symmetry. | |
\( \large 3\) | |
\( \large 4\) Hint: All four have rotational symmetry, but not reflective symmetry. |
Question 16 |
Taxicab fares in Boston (Spring 2012) are $2.60 for the first \(\dfrac{1}{7}\) of a mile or less and $0.40 for each \(\dfrac{1}{7}\) of a mile after that.
Let d represent the distance a passenger travels in miles (with \(d>\dfrac{1}{7}\)). Which of the following expressions represents the total fare?
\( \large \$2.60+\$0.40d\) Hint: It's 40 cents for 1/7 of a mile, not per mile. | |
\( \large \$2.60+\$0.40\dfrac{d}{7}\) Hint: According to this equation, going 7 miles would cost $3; does that make sense? | |
\( \large \$2.20+\$2.80d\) Hint: You can think of the fare as $2.20 to enter the cab, and then $0.40 for each 1/7 of a mile, including the first 1/7 of a mile (or $2.80 per mile).
Alternatively, you pay $2.60 for the first 1/7 of a mile, and then $2.80 per mile for d-1/7 miles. The total is 2.60+2.80(d-1/7) = 2.60+ 2.80d -.40 = 2.20+2.80d. | |
\( \large \$2.60+\$2.80d\) Hint: Don't count the first 1/7 of a mile twice. |
Question 17 |
Which of the lists below contains only irrational numbers?
\( \large\pi , \quad \sqrt{6},\quad \sqrt{\dfrac{1}{2}}\) | |
\( \large\pi , \quad \sqrt{9}, \quad \pi +1\) Hint: \( \sqrt{9}=3\) | |
\( \large\dfrac{1}{3},\quad \dfrac{5}{4},\quad \dfrac{2}{9}\) Hint: These are all rational. | |
\( \large-3,\quad 14,\quad 0\) Hint: These are all rational. |
Question 18 |
| I. \(\large \dfrac{1}{2}+\dfrac{1}{3}\) | II. \( \large .400000\) | III. \(\large\dfrac{1}{5}+\dfrac{1}{5}\) |
| IV. \( \large 40\% \) | V. \( \large 0.25 \) | VI. \(\large\dfrac{14}{35}\) |
Which of the lists below includes all of the above expressions that are equivalent to \( \dfrac{2}{5}\)?
I, III, V, VIHint: I and V are not at all how fractions and decimals work. | |
III, VIHint: These are right, but there are more. | |
II, III, VIHint: These are right, but there are more. | |
II, III, IV, VI |
Question 19 |
Which of the following nets will not fold into a cube?
![]() Hint: If you have trouble visualizing, cut them out and fold (during the test, you can tear paper to approximate). | |
![]() | |
![]() Hint: If you have trouble visualizing, cut them out and fold (during the test, you can tear paper to approximate). | |
![]() Hint: If you have trouble visualizing, cut them out and fold (during the test, you can tear paper to approximate). |
Question 20 |
Here is a mental math strategy for computing 26 x 16:
Step 1: 100 x 16 = 1600
Step 2: 25 x 16 = 1600 ÷· 4 = 400
Step 3: 26 x 16 = 400 + 16 = 416
Which property best justifies Step 3 in this strategy?
Commutative Property.Hint: For addition, the commutative property is \(a+b=b+a\) and for multiplication it's \( a \times b = b \times a\). | |
Associative Property.Hint: For addition, the associative property is \((a+b)+c=a+(b+c)\) and for multiplication it's \((a \times b) \times c=a \times (b \times c)\) | |
Identity Property.Hint: 0 is the additive identity, because \( a+0=a\) and 1 is the multiplicative identity because \(a \times 1=a\). The phrase "identity property" is not standard. | |
Distributive Property.Hint: \( (25+1) \times 16 = 25 \times 16 + 1 \times 16 \). This is an example of the distributive property of multiplication over addition. |
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