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A teacher has 3 hours to grade all the papers submitted by the 35 students in her class. She gets through the first 5 papers in 30 minutes. How much faster does she have to work to grade the remaining papers in the allotted time?

2 Answers

5 votes
At first, she was grading papers at 10 papers per hour. To meet her time limit, she would have to begin grading them at 12 papers per hour, or 20% faster than her previous rate
User Donne
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2 votes
so, she has 3hrs to grade all papers, for 35 students.. alrite.

the first 5, she does them in 30minutes.. what's the speed rate? well, 5/30 or 1/6

now, she has still 2 hours and a half, or 150 minutes, to do the remaining 30 papers... she has to work at a rate of 30/150 then... which is 1/5 simplified.

now if we take 1/6 as the 100%, what is 1/5 in percentage then?


\bf \begin{array}{ccllll} rate&\%\\ \text{\textemdash\textemdash\textemdash}&\text{\textemdash\textemdash\textemdash}\\ (1)/(6)&100\\\\ (1)/(5)&x \end{array}\implies \cfrac{(1)/(6)}{(1)/(5)}=\cfrac{100}{x}\implies \cfrac{1}{6}\cdot \cfrac{5}{1}=\cfrac{100}{x}\implies \cfrac{5}{6}=\cfrac{100}{x} \\\\\\ x=\cfrac{6\cdot 100}{5}\implies x=120

so 1/5 is 120% in relation to 1/6... meaning the rate of 1/5 she needs to move through, namely 1 paper every 5 minutes, is 20% faster than 1/6.
User Originalhat
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