ENTRANCE EXAM -1951
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- GE (Great Erasmus)
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ENTRANCE EXAM -1951
Here is the Arithmetic Test Paper 1951 Time 45 minutes. Age: 10-11. NO calculators or log tables! Did we really do that and pass?
(Please note that I have had to write some fractions out in full as I cannot persuade my computer to express them mathematically - sorry Julian!)
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The Candidate's name and initials must be written on each sheet: and the sheets must he fastened together with either string or pins.
CHRIST'S HOSPITAL
ALMONERS' NOMINEES' EXAMINATION (PART II), 1951
ARITHMETIC
Time allowed, 45 minutes
1. If a fire, which is not allowed to go out, burns 1lb of coal every hour, find the weight of coal it burns in a year (365 days) giving the answer in tons, cwt, lb.
2. What would be the value of l¾lb. of a substance if ¾lb. of it is worth £12 5s. 3d?
3. Simplify:
(i) 3⅜ + 4⅓ – two and five-sixths.
(ii) Four and four-ninths divided by five-sixths.
(iii) 1.74 x 1.4.
4. A man walked at a steady speed of 5 miles per hour:
(i) How far did he walk in 1 hour 36 minutes?
(ii) How long did he take to walk 2¼ miles?
5. On each £1 interest a tax of 9s. 6d. has to be paid. Find the total interest if £ 189 is left after tax has been paid.
6. 44 yards of wire netting are used to enclose a pen for hens:
(i) What is the area enclosed if the pen is square,
(ii) What is the area enclosed if the pen is a rectangle 10½ yd. wide?
7. A shop assistant takes a job and begins to earn 35s. a week. If wages are increased by Is. 6d. at the end of each eight weeks, how many weeks must he work before the wage is more than £3 a week?
8. In an examination a candidate scored 44% on the English paper (full marks 200) and 38% on the Arithmetic paper (full marks 250):
(i) How many marks did he score on each paper?
(ii) What was his percentage score on the two papers taken together?
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PLEASE DO NOT ASK ME FOR THE ANSWERS!!
(Please note that I have had to write some fractions out in full as I cannot persuade my computer to express them mathematically - sorry Julian!)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Candidate's name and initials must be written on each sheet: and the sheets must he fastened together with either string or pins.
CHRIST'S HOSPITAL
ALMONERS' NOMINEES' EXAMINATION (PART II), 1951
ARITHMETIC
Time allowed, 45 minutes
1. If a fire, which is not allowed to go out, burns 1lb of coal every hour, find the weight of coal it burns in a year (365 days) giving the answer in tons, cwt, lb.
2. What would be the value of l¾lb. of a substance if ¾lb. of it is worth £12 5s. 3d?
3. Simplify:
(i) 3⅜ + 4⅓ – two and five-sixths.
(ii) Four and four-ninths divided by five-sixths.
(iii) 1.74 x 1.4.
4. A man walked at a steady speed of 5 miles per hour:
(i) How far did he walk in 1 hour 36 minutes?
(ii) How long did he take to walk 2¼ miles?
5. On each £1 interest a tax of 9s. 6d. has to be paid. Find the total interest if £ 189 is left after tax has been paid.
6. 44 yards of wire netting are used to enclose a pen for hens:
(i) What is the area enclosed if the pen is square,
(ii) What is the area enclosed if the pen is a rectangle 10½ yd. wide?
7. A shop assistant takes a job and begins to earn 35s. a week. If wages are increased by Is. 6d. at the end of each eight weeks, how many weeks must he work before the wage is more than £3 a week?
8. In an examination a candidate scored 44% on the English paper (full marks 200) and 38% on the Arithmetic paper (full marks 250):
(i) How many marks did he score on each paper?
(ii) What was his percentage score on the two papers taken together?
------------------------------------------------------
PLEASE DO NOT ASK ME FOR THE ANSWERS!!
- englishangel
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- jtaylor
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It's pretty straight-forward now, but when I was 10??? I doubt I'd have answered a single question!
I maths-coach teenagers in the evenings, and I'm teaching some of this stuff to them for GCSE, let alone for entrance exams!
The only ones I struggle with are the old-money questions - before my time....
J
I maths-coach teenagers in the evenings, and I'm teaching some of this stuff to them for GCSE, let alone for entrance exams!
The only ones I struggle with are the old-money questions - before my time....
J
Julian Taylor-Gadd
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Founder of The Unofficial CH Forum
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- englishangel
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- Richard Ruck
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It's a doddle, Julian!jtaylor wrote:The only ones I struggle with are the old-money questions - before my time....J
This is what I remember from the '60s
Coins -
Farthing = 1 quarter of a penny (abolished 1961, so I don't really remember it in circulation!).
Halfpenny
Penny
Threepenny bit
Sixpence
Shilling (= 12 pence)
Florin - 2 shillings
Half-crown - 2 shillings six pence
Crown - 5 shillings (not in general circulation)
Guinea - 21 shillings (not in general circulation)
£1.00 = 20 shillings.
There was also a 10 shilling note in circulation (equivalent to 50p today).
I once found one of these in the street as a kid, and thought it so valuable (and was such an honest brat) that I took it to the local cop shop. No-one claimed it, so after 3 months it was all mine.
Ba.A / Mid. B 1972 - 1978
Thee's got'n where thee cassn't back'n, hassn't?
Thee's got'n where thee cassn't back'n, hassn't?
- englishangel
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- J.R.
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OH DEAR !!!!englishangel wrote:I have printed it off and I am going to try it later.
I am a sucker for a challenge.
This exam paper brings back memories. Seem to recall it was the same, or similar in 1957. Oddly enough, very similar to the basic Police math entry exam in the early 60's.
Interesting to see if the kids who are shown this can do it without calculators etc. Of course, we didn't have 'em in my day.
John Rutley. Prep B & Coleridge B. 1958-1963.
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- GE (Great Erasmus)
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Concerning crowns and guineas.
I believe that there may have been a very, very small number of crown coins, but I certainly never, ever saw one and I doubt very much that they were ever on public issue. As to guineas, although it is correct that 1 guinea = 21 shillings, I do not believe that there ever was either a coin or a note for such an amount. It seems to have been used mainly among the horse-racing fraternity, but why, I do not know.
There was also a Five-Pound note which was printed on white paper and considerably larger than the 10 shiiling and 1 pound notes. It gave a feeling of great satisfaction to hold one - which, in my case, was very rarely.
The sort of sums I really used to enjoy were of the form "Divide £11,284: 16s:2d by 184." A total waste of time, but quite satisfying when the answer came out right. In the early '50s, boys with more prosperous parents used to have little hand calculators which worked mechanically and involved moving slides up and down with a small needle. Not only could I not afford one, but I never understood how they worked, anyway.
I am delighted that posting the paper has given so much pleasure although I suspect that there will be some sore heads tonight!
I believe that there may have been a very, very small number of crown coins, but I certainly never, ever saw one and I doubt very much that they were ever on public issue. As to guineas, although it is correct that 1 guinea = 21 shillings, I do not believe that there ever was either a coin or a note for such an amount. It seems to have been used mainly among the horse-racing fraternity, but why, I do not know.
There was also a Five-Pound note which was printed on white paper and considerably larger than the 10 shiiling and 1 pound notes. It gave a feeling of great satisfaction to hold one - which, in my case, was very rarely.
The sort of sums I really used to enjoy were of the form "Divide £11,284: 16s:2d by 184." A total waste of time, but quite satisfying when the answer came out right. In the early '50s, boys with more prosperous parents used to have little hand calculators which worked mechanically and involved moving slides up and down with a small needle. Not only could I not afford one, but I never understood how they worked, anyway.
I am delighted that posting the paper has given so much pleasure although I suspect that there will be some sore heads tonight!
- J.R.
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Loads about in collections. Generally issued for a special occasion. Both our daughters have Sir Winston Churchill crowns in presentation cases.petard249 wrote:Concerning crowns and guineas.
I believe that there may have been a very, very small number of crown coins, but I certainly never, ever saw one and I doubt very much that they were ever on public issue. As to guineas, although it is correct that 1 guinea = 21 shillings, I do not believe that there ever was either a coin or a note for such an amount. It seems to have been used mainly among the horse-racing fraternity, but why, I do not know.
There was also a Five-Pound note which was printed on white paper and considerably larger than the 10 shiiling and 1 pound notes. It gave a feeling of great satisfaction to hold one - which, in my case, was very rarely.
The sort of sums I really used to enjoy were of the form "Divide £11,284: 16s:2d by 184." A total waste of time, but quite satisfying when the answer came out right. In the early '50s, boys with more prosperous parents used to have little hand calculators which worked mechanically and involved moving slides up and down with a small needle. Not only could I not afford one, but I never understood how they worked, anyway.
I am delighted that posting the paper has given so much pleasure although I suspect that there will be some sore heads tonight!
I suppose one of the squits will now ask what a 'Half-Crown' was ??
John Rutley. Prep B & Coleridge B. 1958-1963.
- englishangel
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Guineas are still used for horse auctions.
There were indeed guinea coins many years ago (George III)
Crowns (5/-, 25 pence) used to be quite common and are still made occasionally for special occasions, three this year alone, for Nelson/Trafalgar etc. and they are legal tender.
check out this website
http://www.24carat.co.uk/britishorengli ... frame.html
There were indeed guinea coins many years ago (George III)
Crowns (5/-, 25 pence) used to be quite common and are still made occasionally for special occasions, three this year alone, for Nelson/Trafalgar etc. and they are legal tender.
check out this website
http://www.24carat.co.uk/britishorengli ... frame.html
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Mrs C might like to spread this around CH.
I wrote it when recruits with GCSE Maths grade 3 or better were frequently found to be incompetent. Unlimited time, unlimited scrap paper, no calculators, calender on the back wall of the exam room, candidates alone, unsupervised.
1 What is the interest on £10,000 for 4 months at 1 1/2% per annum?
2. What is the interest on £20,000 for 3 months at 2% pa.
3. What is the date 90 days after 3rd June?
4. What is 80% of the cost of 2,000 bales of wool at £50 per bale?
5. £15,468.78
add £ 7,649.32
----------------
(blank line for answer)
deduct £ 18,872.59
----------------
(blank line for answer)
add £ 27,985.87
---------------
(blank line for answer
----------------
End of test. (The amounts in Q5 should be lined up - they are not because of this medium we use)
If it seems easy, it is. There are no catches and the first 4 were answered by a colleague (checking my calculations in his head) in about 25 seconds).
Of the first 15 candidates who sat the test 7 did not get a single question right, and we had about 3 who got 5 out of 5. (Note - they all had the grade C in Maths).
I spoke to a deputy head teacher about the results and he was most indignant, saying that it was not for schoools to teach pupils how to do such sums - employers should do that. His school was "blacked" thereafter.
Between this and the first post on this thread I know which I prefer!
I wrote it when recruits with GCSE Maths grade 3 or better were frequently found to be incompetent. Unlimited time, unlimited scrap paper, no calculators, calender on the back wall of the exam room, candidates alone, unsupervised.
1 What is the interest on £10,000 for 4 months at 1 1/2% per annum?
2. What is the interest on £20,000 for 3 months at 2% pa.
3. What is the date 90 days after 3rd June?
4. What is 80% of the cost of 2,000 bales of wool at £50 per bale?
5. £15,468.78
add £ 7,649.32
----------------
(blank line for answer)
deduct £ 18,872.59
----------------
(blank line for answer)
add £ 27,985.87
---------------
(blank line for answer
----------------
End of test. (The amounts in Q5 should be lined up - they are not because of this medium we use)
If it seems easy, it is. There are no catches and the first 4 were answered by a colleague (checking my calculations in his head) in about 25 seconds).
Of the first 15 candidates who sat the test 7 did not get a single question right, and we had about 3 who got 5 out of 5. (Note - they all had the grade C in Maths).
I spoke to a deputy head teacher about the results and he was most indignant, saying that it was not for schoools to teach pupils how to do such sums - employers should do that. His school was "blacked" thereafter.
Between this and the first post on this thread I know which I prefer!
What happens if a politician drowns in a river? That is pollution.
What happens if all of them drown? That is solution!!!
What happens if all of them drown? That is solution!!!
- englishangel
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It has been pointed out to me privately that I got two wrong. No 1, I will work out later.#I took 5 minutes but it is 5.30 amsejintenej wrote:Mrs C might like to spread this around CH.
I wrote it when recruits with GCSE Maths grade 3 or better were frequently found to be incompetent. Unlimited time, unlimited scrap paper, no calculators, calender on the back wall of the exam room, candidates alone, unsupervised.
1 What is the interest on £10,000 for 4 months at 1 1/2% per annum?
£100
2. What is the interest on £20,000 for 3 months at 2% pa.
£100
3. What is the date 90 days after 3rd June?
28th September
4. What is 80% of the cost of 2,000 bales of wool at £50 per bale?
£80,000
5. £15,468.78
add £ 7,649.32
----------------
£23,118.10
deduct £ 18,872.59
----------------
£4,245.51
add £ 27,985.87
---------------
£32,231.38 ----------------
End of test. (The amounts in Q5 should be lined up - they are not because of this medium we use)
If it seems easy, it is. There are no catches and the first 4 were answered by a colleague (checking my calculations in his head) in about 25 seconds).
Of the first 15 candidates who sat the test 7 did not get a single question right, and we had about 3 who got 5 out of 5. (Note - they all had the grade C in Maths).
I spoke to a deputy head teacher about the results and he was most indignant, saying that it was not for schoools to teach pupils how to do such sums - employers should do that. His school was "blacked" thereafter.
Between this and the first post on this thread I know which I prefer!
No 3 I misread as June 30th. I did say it was 5.30am.
Last edited by englishangel on Thu Dec 08, 2005 10:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"If a man speaks, and there isn't a woman to hear him, is he still wrong?"