2017 AMC 10B Problems/Problem 25
Problem
Last year Isabella took math tests and received
different scores, each an integer between
and
, inclusive. After each test she noticed that the average of her test scores was an integer. Her score on the seventh test was
. What was her score on the sixth test?
Solution 1
Let the sum of the scores of Isabella's first tests be
. Since the mean of her first
scores is an integer, then
, or
. Also,
, so by CRT,
. We also know that
, so by inspection,
. However, we also have that the mean of the first
test scores must be an integer, so the sum of the first
test scores must be an multiple of
, which implies that the
th test score is
.
bro why is this problem impossible
Solution 2
First, we find the largest sum of scores which is which equals
. Then we find the smallest sum of scores which is
which is
. So the possible sums for the 7 test scores so that they provide an integer average are
and
which are
and
respectively. Now in order to get the sum of the first 6 tests, we subtract
from each sum producing
and
. Notice only
is divisible by
so, therefore, the sum of the first
tests is
. We need to find her score on the
test so we have to find which number will give us a number divisible by
when subtracted from
Since
is the
test score and all test scores are distinct that only leaves
.
Solution 3
Since all of the scores are from , we can subtract 90 from all of the scores. Basically, we're looking at their units digits (except for 100 - we're looking at 10 in this case). Since the last score was a 95, the sum of the scores from the first six tests must be
and
. Trying out a few cases, the only solution possible is 30 (this is from adding numbers 1-10). The sixth test score must be
because
. The only possible test scores are
and
, and
is already used, so the answer is
.
Video Solution
https://youtu.be/YFz4bctJYVE - Happytwin
See Also
2017 AMC 10B (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
Preceded by Problem 24 |
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