Peter, Paul, and Mary each received a passing score on . . .

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Peter, Paul, and Mary each received a passing score on his/her history midterm. The average (arithmetic mean) of the three scores was 78. What was the median of the three scores?

(1) Peter scored a 73 on his exam.

(2) Mary scored a 78 on her exam.

The OA is B.

I don't know how can I solve this DS question. Experts may you help me please? Thanks in advance.
Source: — Data Sufficiency |

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median

by GMATGuruNY » Thu Nov 30, 2017 10:23 am
VJesus12 wrote:Peter, Paul, and Mary each received a passing score on his/her history midterm. The average (arithmetic mean) of the three scores was 78. What was the median of the three scores?

(1) Peter scored a 73 on his exam.

(2) Mary scored a 78 on her exam.
Sum of the 3 scores = (number of scores)(average score) = 3*78 = 234.

Statement 1:
Sum of the 2 remaining scores = (sum of the 3 scores) - (Peter's score) = 234 - 73 = 161.

Case 1: The 2 remaining scores are 70 and 91
In this case, the 3 scores are 70, 73 and 91, with the result that the median score is 73.
Case 2: The 2 remaining scores are 80 and 81
In this case, the 3 scores are 73, 80, and 81, with the result that the median score is 80.

Since the median score can be different values, INSUFFICIENT.

Statement 2:
Sum of the 2 remaining scores = (sum of the 3 scores) - (Mary's score) = 234 - 78 = 156.

Case 1: The 2 remaining scores are 78 and 78
In this case, the 3 scores are 78, 78 and 78, with the result that the median score is 78.
Case 2: One of the 2 remaining scores is less than 78, while the other remaining score is greater than 78
In this case, the 3 scores are (less than 78), 78, (more than 78), with the result that the median score is 78.

No other case is possible.
For the 2 remaining scores to sum to 156, either Case 1 is true (the 2 remaining scores are 78), or Case 2 is true (one of the 2 remaining scores is less than 78, while the other remaining score is greater than 78).
Since the median score in each case is the same -- 78 -- statement 2 is SUFFICIENT.

The correct answer is B.
Last edited by GMATGuruNY on Thu Nov 30, 2017 10:28 am, edited 1 time in total.
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by Brent@GMATPrepNow » Thu Nov 30, 2017 10:24 am
VJesus12 wrote:Peter, Paul, and Mary each received a passing score on his/her history midterm. The average (arithmetic mean) of the three scores was 78. What was the median of the three scores?

(1) Peter scored a 73 on his exam.

(2) Mary scored a 78 on her exam.
Target question: What was the median of the three scores?

Since there are 3 values, the median will be the middle-most value (when the values are arranged in ascending order).

We also know that: Total of all values = (median)(# of values)
So, the sum of all 3 scores = (78)(3) = 234

Statement 1: Peter scored a 73 on his exam.
There are several sets of scores that meet this condition. Here are two:
Case a: Peter:73, Paul:74, Mary:87, in which case the median is 74
Case b: Peter:73, Paul:75, Mary:86, in which case the median is 75
Since we cannot answer the target question with certainty, statement 1 is NOT SUFFICIENT

Statement 2: Mary scored a 78 on her exam
NOTE: For scores above 78, I'll use the notation 78+ and for scores below 78, I'll use the notation 78-
If the mean is 78 and Mary scored a 78, then there are only 3 scenarios possible:
scenario 1: Peter:78, Mary:78, Paul:78, in which case the median is 78
scenario 2: Peter:78-, Mary:78, Paul:78+, in which case the median is 78
scenario 3: Peter:78+, Mary:78, Paul:78-, in which case the median is 78

Notice that no other scenarios are possible. For example, consider this scenario:
Peter:78+, Mary:78, Paul:78+
This scenario is impossible, because the sum of all three values must be 234, and we know that 78+78+78=234.
So, it is impossible for (78)+(78+)+(78+) to equal 234

Using similar logic and notation we can show that other scenarios are impossible.
As you can see, statement 2 consistently yields the same answer to the target question.
So, statement 2 is SUFFICIENT

Answer = B

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Brent
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