I understand a lot of these leases leave it to the farmer to dispose of the solar arrays when the lease is over. The farmer should read the lease carefully to make sure he/she knows who is responsible for environmental clean up at the end of the lease.
I over heard some of the kids talking about how they solved the problem as I was waiting for my son to come out of the building on test day. A whole lot of kids over thought this problem and / or made assumptions that were not part of the stated information. It happens.
Farmer Sam shouldn't choose either one of the options. For the first options he has a lease of 40 years and he's leasing 5 acres to them and making $10,000 normally he makes $3,000 and for one acre from the first deal he will be making only $2,000 2/3 of what he makes right now. The second deal is over time time for 12 years and for 12 acres he's still making the still amount of money of $10,000 even less than the first deal. Only if farmer sam could equally the same amount of money if he's allowed to used his land should he go with the deal. Otherwise none of the deals. ---------------- Please give me feedback on this because this is something similar to what I wrote and what mistakes did I make and just to let you know my friends didn't mention anything about if farmer sam could equally the same amount of money if he's allowed to used his land should he go with the deal. that's what they told me after the exam is that a thumbs up for me or downside
hi, I am preparing for the 2024 exam. Can you post a video after the test is over so I know I did it right? Also, for previous years, can you post a video doing a practice essay for one of the math/science questions? Ty
We will do our best to post the 2024 one ASAP (so long as we can track down the prompt). For the video walkthrough, we do have something similar as a part of our self-paced course. If you're interested, please take a look here: www.tjtestprep.com/course
Hi, for me I compared the three options by assuming he had 12 acres and farmed for 40 years. It may not be the exact values but if we have the same values then we can compare the values correctly. Would this work?
Thank you for reaching out! Typically, any problem given can be solved with just Algebra 1 as TJ admissions wants to be inclusive to all applicants. Please take a look here: www.tjtestprep.com/post/worried-about-the-math-or-science-problem-solving-essay-study-these-topics
hi, do you have any other resources to help prepare for the 2024 tjhsst test other than your blog, other than the $500 course, and other than these videos to help prep for the test ???
Hi Naysha, we do not currently have any other free resources. That preparation course is the very best option for prep. If cost is an issue due to financial hardships, please contact us so we can send you the scholarship application form. We’ve already given out over tens of thousands in need based scholarships so if this applies to you, let us know via email!
Hi, for me I compared the three options by assuming he had 12 acres and farmed for 40 years. It may not be the exact values but if we have the same values then we can compare the values correctly. Would this work?
I understand a lot of these leases leave it to the farmer to dispose of the solar arrays when the lease is over. The farmer should read the lease carefully to make sure he/she knows who is responsible for environmental clean up at the end of the lease.
Great video! Thanks for the help.
Happy to help!
I over heard some of the kids talking about how they solved the problem as I was waiting for my son to come out of the building on test day. A whole lot of kids over thought this problem and / or made assumptions that were not part of the stated information. It happens.
Spot on! This required not much more than simple multiplicaiton/dvision from the mathemtical standpoint.
Farmer Sam shouldn't choose either one of the options.
For the first options he has a lease of 40 years and he's leasing 5 acres to them and making $10,000 normally he makes $3,000 and for one acre from the first deal he will be making only $2,000 2/3 of what he makes right now.
The second deal is over time time for 12 years and for 12 acres he's still making the still amount of money of $10,000 even less than the first deal. Only if farmer sam could equally the same amount of money if he's allowed to used his land should he go with the deal.
Otherwise none of the deals.
----------------
Please give me feedback on this because this is something similar to what I wrote and what mistakes did I make and just to let you know my friends didn't mention anything about if farmer sam could equally the same amount of money if he's allowed to used his land should he go with the deal. that's what they told me after the exam is that a thumbs up for me or downside
We're happy to continue this conversation via email. It sounds like from what you wrote, you got the answer mathematically correct.
hi, I am preparing for the 2024 exam. Can you post a video after the test is over so I know I did it right? Also, for previous years, can you post a video doing a practice essay for one of the math/science questions? Ty
We will do our best to post the 2024 one ASAP (so long as we can track down the prompt). For the video walkthrough, we do have something similar as a part of our self-paced course. If you're interested, please take a look here: www.tjtestprep.com/course
@@EduAvenues do you have any other resources other than the course?
@@nayshg Sure! We recommend going through the blog as well: www.tjtestprep.com/blog
Hi, for me I compared the three options by assuming he had 12 acres and farmed for 40 years. It may not be the exact values but if we have the same values then we can compare the values correctly. Would this work?
That approach should work as well! Nice job
nice did it correctly hope i get in
@ENDERPEARL656 ahh i got offered, best luck to u :)
@@hallo5159 same here I got in and best of luck to you hopefully your accepted @hallo5159
hi, what level math will be on the essay?
Thank you for reaching out! Typically, any problem given can be solved with just Algebra 1 as TJ admissions wants to be inclusive to all applicants. Please take a look here: www.tjtestprep.com/post/worried-about-the-math-or-science-problem-solving-essay-study-these-topics
hi, do you have any other resources to help prepare for the 2024 tjhsst test other than your blog, other than the $500 course, and other than these videos to help prep for the test ???
Hi Naysha, we do not currently have any other free resources. That preparation course is the very best option for prep. If cost is an issue due to financial hardships, please contact us so we can send you the scholarship application form. We’ve already given out over tens of thousands in need based scholarships so if this applies to you, let us know via email!
@@EduAvenues oh
Hello were did you got 3000 from plz tell
This comes from Farmer Sam's revenue of $15K - $12K of expenses. That leaves $3K in earnings per acre.
it never says anything about the $3000 per year, it just says $3000
That's a great point! This would be implicit within the prompt, although certainly an assumption you could discuss further in your essay.
Hi, for me I compared the three options by assuming he had 12 acres and farmed for 40 years. It may not be the exact values but if we have the same values then we can compare the values correctly. Would this work?
That approach should work as well! Nice job