Order of Operations
Evaluating expressions using PEMDAS — includes custom operation symbol problems (e.g., a◆b = a − 3b)
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Imagine making a giant, gooey pizza. You wouldn't put the cheese on the pan, bake it, and THEN add the raw dough on top, right? 🍕 That would be a messy disaster! Just like making a pizza, math has a special recipe called the Order of Operations. If you do the math steps in the wrong order, you get a totally weird answer!
To keep us from making math disasters on the ISEE, we use a secret code: PEMDAS. 🕵️♂️ You might know it as 'Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally.' It tells us exactly which part of a math problem to tackle first. First, we do Parentheses (the crust). Then Exponents (the sauce). Next comes Multiplication and Division (the cheese and pepperoni). Finally, we finish with Addition and Subtraction (baking it to perfection).
On the ISEE, you'll see these questions in both the Quantitative Reasoning and Mathematics Achievement sections. The test-makers love to try and trick you by putting addition at the very beginning of a problem, hoping you'll just read left to right like a book. But you're too smart for that! 🧠 Always follow your PEMDAS recipe, write down your steps, and you'll serve up the right answer every single time. Let's practice being math master chefs! 👨🍳
Practice Questions
4 practice questions for ISEE Lower Level
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- The correct answer is (A). The associative property of addition states that the way in which numbers are grouped by parentheses does not change their sum. For example, is the same as . Choice (A) demonstrates this concept using shapes. Choice (B) shows the commutative property, Choice (C) shows the identity property, and Choice (D) shows the distributive property.
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- To find the value of , follow the order of operations. First, evaluate the addition inside the parentheses: . The expression is now . Next, multiply in the numerator: . Finally, divide the result by the denominator: . Therefore, .
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- Evaluate each expression using the order of operations (PEMDAS). For choice (B), first evaluate the operation inside the parentheses: . The expression becomes . Next, multiply: . Finally, subtract: . The other choices evaluate to 24, 24, and 36, respectively.
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- According to the order of operations, division must be performed before addition and subtraction. First, divide 10 by 2: . The expression becomes . Next, perform addition and subtraction from left to right. Add 20 and 5 to get 25, then subtract 4: .
Tips & Strategies
- Multiplication and Division are twins! They are on the exact same level. If you have a problem like , you go left-to-right. Don't multiply first just because 'M' comes before 'D' in PEMDAS. , and .
- On Quantitative Comparison questions, test-makers love to see if you'll assume is the same as . As we saw in question 2, they are NOT the same! Always do the math to prove it.
- Write down every single step, one line at a time underneath the original problem. Trying to hold all the numbers in your head is a quick way to accidentally drop a number!
Common Mistakes
- Watch out for reading math problems like a book! Just because starts with addition doesn't mean you add first. You MUST multiply first to get .
- Don't forget that a fraction bar is a sneaky grouping symbol. If you see , you have to figure out the entire top () and the entire bottom () before you divide them!
Frequently Asked Questions
What if I see a weird symbol like a star or a smiley face in a math problem?
Don't panic! The ISEE sometimes invents 'custom operations' like . Just plug the numbers into the formula they give you and follow standard PEMDAS rules to solve it.
What do I do if there are parentheses inside of parentheses?
Work from the inside out! Find the deepest, most buried set of parentheses, solve the math inside them first, and then work your way outward.
Is there a penalty for guessing if I run out of time on a long PEMDAS problem?
Nope! On the ISEE, there is NO penalty for wrong answers. If you are totally stuck or running out of time, pick your favorite letter and bubble it in. Never leave a question blank!