Hi All,
Here, we have a relatively straight-forward DS question. For many Test Takers, it's an easy prompt to "talk" through. On Test Day though, for Test Takers who end up with a score that is lower than expected, the most common reason is SILLY MISTAKES. To that end, you can PROVE the correct answer to this question with just a little bit of note-taking and REMOVE the possibility of a silly mistake happening here.
We're told that there are 105 students, comprised of Freshmen, Sophomores and Juniors. We're asked for the number of Sophomores.
For organizational purposes, I'm going to assign variables:
F = # of Freshmen
S = # of Sophomores
J = # of Juniors
F + S + J = 105
Fact 1: The ratio of F:S = 1:2
We can TEST VALUES to prove there's more than one possibility:
IF....
F = 1
S = 2
J = 102
The answer to the question is 2
F = 2
S = 4
J = 99
The answer to the question is 4
Fact 1 is INSUFFICIENT
Fact 2: The ratio of F:J = 1:4
Again, we can TEST VALUES to prove there's more than one possibility:
IF...
F = 1
J = 4
S = 100
The answer to the question is 100
F = 2
J = 8
S = 95
The answer to the question is 95
Fact 2 is INSUFFICIENT
Combined, we know...
F:S = 1:2
F:J = 1:4
We can combined these ratios into one "big" ratio:
F:S:J
1:2:4
With this ratio and the 105 total students, we CAN figure out the number of each.
F:S:J
15:30:60
The answer to the question IS 30
Combined, SUFFICIENT
Final Answer:
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich