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Syllabus BBA Entry Test Math Portion

The document outlines the objectives and scope of the mathematical portion of the IBA Entry Test for undergraduate students. The objectives are to check students' understanding of mathematical concepts, ability to apply concepts to real-world problems, logical reasoning skills, and communication abilities. The test aims to evaluate students' competencies across 30 mathematical topics ranging from numbers and operations to geometry, trigonometry, and mensuration. Raising the standard of the mathematical test is recommended to better prepare students for careers that require strong math skills.

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SyedMaazAli
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
253 views

Syllabus BBA Entry Test Math Portion

The document outlines the objectives and scope of the mathematical portion of the IBA Entry Test for undergraduate students. The objectives are to check students' understanding of mathematical concepts, ability to apply concepts to real-world problems, logical reasoning skills, and communication abilities. The test aims to evaluate students' competencies across 30 mathematical topics ranging from numbers and operations to geometry, trigonometry, and mensuration. Raising the standard of the mathematical test is recommended to better prepare students for careers that require strong math skills.

Uploaded by

SyedMaazAli
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Introduction The career world is competitive.

The competition and the opportunities in the career world become a serious problem for students if they do not do well in Mathematics, because then they are excluding themselves from the many career paths that need Mathematics. We therefore expect that all our selected students must have achieved a high level of excellence in a fundamental discipline like Mathematics. This is highly desirable if they think they may go into any of the Physical, Social, Health Sciences, Business, Medicine, or related areas. Experience has shown that students who come to IBA with a poor grade in Math (or who choose to skip Math in schools / colleges) have a difficult time progressing at IBA. So we strongly recommend that the standard of our Mathematical portion of the IBA ENTRY test should be raised significantly. This is in the student's best interest. The Aims & Objectives of the Mathematical Portion of the IBA Entry Test The objectives of testing Mathematics in the IBA Entry Test for Undergrad students are as follows: I. To check if the students have acquired the understanding of concepts of Mathematics and are able to apply them to the problems of the world they live in. II. To check if a student has a sound basis in Mathematics, which is required to apply it in business fields. III. To check if a student is enable to reason consistently, to draw correct conclusions for a given hypotheses; and to inculcate in them a habit of examining any situation critically and analytically. IV. To check if a student is enabling to communicate their thoughts through symbolic expressions and graphs. V. To check whether or not he/she has developed sense of distinction between relevant and irrelevant data. VI. To check the students basic understanding and awareness of the power of Mathematics in generalization and abstraction. VII. To check if a student has fostered the spirit of exploration and discovery. To achieve these aims and objectives we should be examining our students in the following areas of Mathematics: 1. Number candidates should be able to: use natural numbers, integers (positive, negative and zero), prime numbers, common factors and common multiples, rational and irrational numbers, real numbers; continue given number sequences, recognise patterns within and across different sequences and generalise to simple algebraic statements (including expressions for the nth term) relating to such sequences.
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2. Set language and notation use set language and set notation, and Venn diagrams, to describe sets and represent relationships between sets. 3. Function notation use function notation, e.g. f(x) = 7x 9, to describe simple functions, and the notation f (x) = (x + 9) / 7 to describe their inverses. 4. Squares square roots, cubes and cube roots calculate squares, square roots, cubes and cube roots of numbers.
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5. Decimal fractions and percentages use the language and notation of decimal fractions and percentages in appropriate contexts; recognise equivalence and convert between these forms. 6. Ordering order quantities by magnitude and demonstrate familiarity with the symbols =, , >, <, , . 7. The four operations use the four operations for calculations with whole numbers, decimal fractions including correct ordering of operations and use of brackets. 8. Estimation make estimates of numbers, quantities and lengths, give approximations to specified numbers of significant figures and decimal places and round off answers to reasonable accuracy in the context of a given problem. 9. Limits of accuracy obtain appropriate upper and lower bounds to solutions of simple problems (e.g. the calculation of the perimeter or the area of a rectangle), provided the appropriate upper and lower bounds for data has been given to a specified accuracy (e.g. measured lengths). 10. Ratio, proportion, rate an understanding of the elementary ideas and notation of ratio, direct and inverse proportion and common measures of rate; divide a quantity in a given ratio; use scales in practical situations, calculate average speed; express direct and inverse variation in algebraic terms and use this form of expression to find unknown quantities. 11. Percentages calculate a given percentage of a quantity; express one quantity as a percentage of another, calculate percentage increase or decrease; carry out calculations involving reverse percentages, e.g. finding the cost price given the selling price and the percentage profit.

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12. Exponential and Logarithmic Functions definition of Exponential and Logarithmic Functions, and their elementary
characteristics.

13. Measures use current units of mass, length, area, volume and capacity in practical situations and express quantities in terms of larger or smaller units.. 14. Money solve problems involving money and convert from one currency to another. 15. Personal and household finance use given data to solve problems on personal and household finance involving earnings, simple interest, discount, profit and loss; extract data from tables and harts. 16. Graphs in practical situations demonstrate familiarity with cartesian coordinates in two dimensions; interpret and use graphs in practical situations, draw graphs from given data. 17. Graphs of functions n construct tables of values and draw graphs for functions of the form y = ax where n = 1, 0, 1, 2, and simple sums of not more than three of these and for functions of the form y = ka where a is a positive integer; interpret graphs of linear, quadratic, reciprocal and exponential functions; solve equations approximately by graphical methods. 18. Straight line graphs calculate the gradient of a straight line from the coordinates of two points on it; interpret and obtain the equation of a straight line graph in the form y = mx + c; calculate the length and the coordinates of the midpoint of a line segment from the coordinates of its end points. 19. Algebraic representation and formulae use letters to express generalised numbers and express basic arithmetic processes algebraically, substitute numbers for words and letters in formulae; transform simple and more complicated formulae; construct equations from given situations. 20. Algebraic manipulation manipulate directed numbers; use brackets and extract common factors; expand products of algebraic expressions; factorise expressions of the form ax + ay; ax + bx + kay + kby; a x b y ; a b ; a b ; ax + bx + c, by splitting the middle term. 21. Indices/ Exponents handling positive, fractional, negative and zero indices.
2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 2 x

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22. Solutions of equations and inequalities solve simple linear equations in one unknown; solve fractional equations with numerical and linear algebraic denominators; solve simultaneous linear equations in two unknowns; solve quadratic equations by factorisation and either by use of the formula or by completing the square; solve simple linear inequalities. 23. Graphical representation of inequalities represent linear inequalities in one or two variables graphically. 24. Geometrical terms and relationships use and interpret the geometrical terms: point, line, plane, parallel, perpendicular, right angle, acute, obtuse and reflex angles, interior and exterior angles, regular and irregular polygons, pentagons, hexagons, octagons, decagons. use and interpret vocabulary of triangles, circles, special quadrilaterals. solve problems and give simple explanations involving similarity and congruence. use and interpret vocabulary of simple solid figures: cube, cuboid, prism, cylinder, pyramid, cone, sphere. use the relationships between areas of similar triangles, with corresponding results for similar figures, and extension to volumes of similar solids. 25. Geometrical constructions measure lines and angles; construct simple geometrical figures from given data, angle bisectors and perpendicular bisectors. 26. Symmetry recognise line and rotational symmetry (including order of rotational symmetry) in two dimensions, and properties of triangles, quadrilaterals and circles directly related to their symmetries; use the following symmetry properties of circles: (a) equal chords are equidistant from the centre; (b) the perpendicular bisector of a chord passes through the centre; (c) tangents from an external point are equal in length. 27. Angle calculate unknown angles and give simple explanations using the following geometrical properties: (a) angles on a straight line; (b) angles at a point; (c) vertically opposite angles; (d) angles formed by parallel lines; (e) angle properties of triangles and quadrilaterals; (f) angle properties of polygons including angle sum; (g) angle in a semi-circle;
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(h) angle between tangent and radius of a circle; (i) angle at the centre of a circle is twice the angle at the ircumference; (j) angles in the same segment are equal; (k) angles in opposite segments are supplementary. 28. Locus use the following loci and the method of intersecting loci: (a) sets of points in two dimensions (i) which are at a given distance from a given point, (ii) which are at a given distance from a given straight line, (iii) which are equidistant from two given points; (b) sets of points in two dimensions which are equidistant from two given intersecting straight lines. 29. Mensuration solve problems involving (a) the perimeter and area of a rectangle and triangle, (b) the circumference and area of a circle, (c) the area of a parallelogram and a trapezium, (d) the surface area and volume of a cuboid, cylinder, prism, sphere, pyramid and cone, (e) arc length and sector area as fractions of the circumference and area of a circle. 30. Trigonometry apply Pythagoras Theorem and the sine, cosine and tangent ratios for acute angles to the calculation of a side or of an angle of a right-angled triangle (angles will be quoted in, and answers required in, degrees and decimals of a degree to one decimal place); solve trigonometrical problems in two dimensions including those involving angles of elevation and depression and bearings; extend sine and cosine functions to angles between 90 and 180; solve problems using the sine and cosine rules for any triangle and the formula 1/2 ab sin C for the area of a triangle; 31. Statistics collect, classify and tabulate statistical data; read, interpret and draw simple inferences from tables and statistical diagrams; construct and use bar charts, pie charts, pictograms, simple frequency distributions and frequency polygons; use frequency density to construct and read histograms with equal and unequal intervals; calculate the mean, median and mode for individual data and distinguish between the purposes for which they are used; construct and use cumulative frequency diagrams; estimate the median,
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percentiles, quartiles and interquartile range; calculate the mean for grouped data; identify the modal class from a grouped frequency distribution. 32. Probability calculate the probability of a single event as either a fraction or a decimal (not a ratio); calculate the probability of simple combined events using possibility diagrams and tree diagrams where appropriate. (In possibility diagrams outcomes will be represented by points on a grid and in tree diagrams outcomes will be written at the end of branches and probabilities by the side of the branches.) 33. Matrices display information in the form of a matrix of any order; solve problems involving the calculation of the sum and product (where appropriate) of two matrices, and interpret the results; calculate the product of a scalar quantity and a matrix; use the algebra of 2 x 2 matrices including the zero and identity 2 x 2 matrices; calculate the determinant and inverse of a non-singular matrix. 34. Vectors in two dimensions describe a translation by using a vector represented by , a or a; add y vectors and multiply a vector by a scalar; calculate the magnitude of a vector (Vectors will be printed as a or a and their magnitudes denoted by modulus signs, e.g. |a| or |a|.) represent vectors by directed line segments; use the sum and difference of two vectors to express given vectors in terms of two coplanar vectors; use position vectors.
x

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