USTET Mathematics — Algebra — Sets, Exponents, Radicals, Polynomials & EquationsMemory Anchors
Memory anchors for Algebra — Sets, Exponents, Radicals, Polynomials & Equations — mnemonic devices, acronyms, and tricks that make the USTET Mathematics syllabus stick. Use these when a concept just will not stay in your head.
Exam context
University of Santo Tomas runs the University of Santo Tomas Entrance Test on Early Q4 2026. Its Mathematics section sits under a "Core section" weighting, and Algebra — Sets, Exponents, Radicals, Polynomials & Equations is the 3rd chapter in the 9-chapter USTET Mathematics rotation. The USTET passing mark is Competitive overall score, and the most recent 2026 paper drew about a meaningful share of questions from Mathematics.
Algebra — Sets, Exponents, Radicals, Polynomials & Equations - Memory anchors
Memory techniques are the secret weapons of successful UPCAT test-takers! Just as a barangay captain remembers everyone's name through associations, we can transform complex algebraic concepts into unforgettable mental images, stories, and patterns. These memory anchors will turn intimidating formulas and abstract concepts into familiar friends that stick with you during exams. When you connect new information to what you already know through vivid imagery, acronyms, and stories, your brain creates multiple pathways for recall — making it nearly impossible to forget key concepts when exam pressure hits.
Anchors
Tags
- definition
- visual
- operations
Topic
Set Theory
Concept
Set Operations — Union and Intersection
Anchor Id
A1
Difficulty
easy
Memory Aid
Picture a Filipino family reunion! UNION means UNITE — everyone from all families comes together in one big gathering (all elements combined). INTERSECTION means CROSSING paths — only the cousins who belong to BOTH the Reyes AND Santos families can sit at the special table (common elements only).
Anchor Type
visual_association
Why It Works
Uses familiar family gathering imagery that Filipino students can easily visualize, making abstract set operations concrete and memorable
Example Usage
When solving A ∪ B, imagine gathering ALL family members. When solving A ∩ B, imagine finding ONLY the shared cousins.
Recall Trigger
Think 'Family Reunion' whenever you see set symbols
Tags
- formula
- rule
- multiplication
Topic
Exponents
Concept
Laws of Exponents — Multiplication Rule
Anchor Id
A2
Difficulty
medium
Memory Aid
SAME BASE, ADD THE POWERS — Remember: 'SABAY' (together)! When bases are SABAY (the same), you ADD their powers together like counting total hours worked. x³ × x² = x⁵ because you worked 3 hours plus 2 hours equals 5 total hours!
Anchor Type
mnemonic
Why It Works
Uses the familiar Filipino word 'sabay' and relates to everyday work hour counting, making the abstract rule concrete
Example Usage
For 2³ × 2⁴, think 'SABAY bases, ADD powers: 2³⁺⁴ = 2⁷'
Recall Trigger
Say 'SABAY' when you see same bases being multiplied
Tags
- formula
- sequence
- solving
Topic
Quadratic Equations
Concept
Quadratic Formula
Anchor Id
A3
Difficulty
hard
Memory Aid
BASIC SOLUTION FORMULA — 'Bayad Sa Ikatlong Araw' (Payment on Third Day) for x = [-b ± √(b² - 4ac)] / 2a. B for negative b, S for square root, I for index (b² - 4ac), A for 2a denominator!
Anchor Type
acronym
Why It Works
Creates a memorable Filipino phrase that maps to each component of the formula in order
Example Usage
When solving ax² + bx + c = 0, recite 'Bayad Sa Ikatlong Araw' to recall x = [-b ± √(b² - 4ac)] / 2a
Recall Trigger
Think of paying bills 'Bayad Sa Ikatlong Araw' to remember the formula sequence
Tags
- process
- simplification
- visual
Topic
Radicals
Concept
Radical Simplification Rules
Anchor Id
A4
Difficulty
medium
Memory Aid
Maria the Mangosteen Vendor: Maria (√) can only sell PERFECT SQUARES from her basket. She takes out perfect square factors (like 4, 9, 16) and puts them OUTSIDE her stall, leaving the rest INSIDE. √12 = √(4×3) = 2√3 because she took the perfect 4 outside as 2, leaving 3 inside!
Anchor Type
micro_story
Why It Works
Uses a familiar marketplace scenario that makes the abstract process of factoring out perfect squares visually concrete
Example Usage
For √50, think: Maria finds √(25×2), takes perfect 25 outside as 5, leaving √2 inside = 5√2
Recall Trigger
Picture Maria's mangosteen stall when simplifying radicals
Tags
- method
- multiplication
- sequence
Topic
Polynomials
Concept
FOIL Method for Binomial Multiplication
Anchor Id
A5
Difficulty
medium
Memory Aid
Filipino Outstanding Intelligence League! F-irst terms, O-uter terms, I-nner terms, L-ast terms. Like a basketball play: First player shoots, Outer player rebounds, Inner player assists, Last player scores!
Anchor Type
acronym
Why It Works
Transforms mathematical sequence into exciting basketball action that Filipino students can visualize
Example Usage
For (x+3)(x+2): First=x×x=x², Outer=x×2=2x, Inner=3×x=3x, Last=3×2=6, giving x²+5x+6
Recall Trigger
Think 'Basketball Play' when multiplying two binomials
Tags
- pattern
- factoring
- visual
Topic
Factoring
Concept
Difference of Squares Pattern
Anchor Id
A6
Difficulty
medium
Memory Aid
Picture two identical squares of land being separated by a river! When you have a² - b², it's like two square lots where one is removed from the other, creating a RECTANGULAR shape that factors into (a+b)(a-b) — like the two sides of the river bank!
Anchor Type
visual_association
Why It Works
Uses familiar land/property imagery to make the algebraic pattern visually memorable
Example Usage
For x² - 16, visualize x² lot minus 4² lot = (x+4)(x-4) like riverbank sides
Recall Trigger
Think 'River Between Square Lots' for a² - b²
Tags
- sequence
- rules
- process
Topic
Algebraic Operations
Concept
Order of Operations (PEMDAS)
Anchor Id
A7
Difficulty
easy
Memory Aid
Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally — 'Pakisuyo Excuse Mo Daw Ang Saya' (Please excuse the joy, they say). Parentheses, Exponents, Multiplication/Division, Addition/Subtraction. Like cooking: prep ingredients first (parentheses), heat the pan (exponents), cook main dishes together (multiply/divide), then add final seasonings together (add/subtract)!
Anchor Type
rhyme
Why It Works
Combines familiar cooking process with catchy bilingual phrase, making the sequence unforgettable
Example Usage
For 2 + 3 × 4², think cooking: no parentheses, exponent first (4²=16), multiply (3×16=48), add last (2+48=50)
Recall Trigger
Think 'Cooking Process' when seeing complex expressions
Tags
- definition
- concept
- analogy
Topic
Functions
Concept
Domain and Range of Functions
Anchor Id
A8
Difficulty
medium
Memory Aid
Function is like a Rice Cooker! DOMAIN is all the types of rice you can PUT IN (input values) — jasmine, brown, glutinous rice. RANGE is all the possible cooked results you can GET OUT (output values) — fluffy rice, sticky rice, burnt rice. The rice cooker (function) transforms what goes in!
Anchor Type
analogy
Why It Works
Uses everyday kitchen appliance familiar to Filipino students, making abstract function concepts concrete
Example Usage
For f(x) = x², domain is all real numbers (any rice works), range is y ≥ 0 (only non-negative outputs like properly cooked rice)
Recall Trigger
Picture a rice cooker when determining domain and range
Tags
- process
- simplification
- analogy
Topic
Rational Expressions
Concept
Rational Expression Simplification
Anchor Id
A9
Difficulty
medium
Memory Aid
Kuya's Jeepney Route Optimization: Kuya has the same passengers (common factors) in both the front and back of his jeepney. To optimize, he removes the SAME passengers from both sections, leaving only the unique ones. In fractions, cancel SAME factors from numerator and denominator!
Anchor Type
micro_story
Why It Works
Uses familiar jeepney transportation metaphor to explain the concept of canceling common factors
Example Usage
For (x²-4)/(x-2), factor as (x+2)(x-2)/(x-2), cancel common (x-2) like removing same passengers, get x+2
Recall Trigger
Think 'Jeepney Optimization' when simplifying rational expressions
Tags
- method
- visual
- process
Topic
Quadratic Equations
Concept
Completing the Square Method
Anchor Id
A10
Difficulty
hard
Memory Aid
Building a Perfect Square Bahay Kubo! Start with x² + bx (three walls of the house), then add (b/2)² as the fourth wall to complete the perfect square room. Like adding the final bamboo wall to make your kubo complete and sturdy!
Anchor Type
visual_association
Why It Works
Uses traditional Filipino house construction to visualize the geometric completion of algebraic squares
Example Usage
For x² + 6x, take half of 6 (which is 3), square it (9), add to complete: x² + 6x + 9 = (x+3)²
Recall Trigger
Picture building a bahay kubo when completing the square
Tags
- method
- process
- elimination
Topic
Systems of Equations
Concept
System of Linear Equations — Elimination Method
Anchor Id
A11
Difficulty
medium
Memory Aid
Elimination is like a TV Game Show! Two contestants (equations) compete, but one variable must be ELIMINATED. Make their coefficients opposites (like equal but opposite points), then ADD them up. The losing variable cancels out (becomes zero), and the winning variable reveals its value!
Anchor Type
analogy
Why It Works
Game show competition metaphor makes the abstract elimination process exciting and memorable
Example Usage
For 2x+y=7 and 3x-y=8, y-coefficients are opposites, add equations: 5x=15, so x=3
Recall Trigger
Think 'TV Game Show Elimination' when solving systems
Tags
- comparison
- visual
- inverse
Topic
Exponential and Logarithmic Functions
Concept
Exponential vs Logarithmic Functions
Anchor Id
A12
Difficulty
hard
Memory Aid
Exponential is like Climbing UP Mayon Volcano (steep climb, gets harder fast) — y = 2^x shoots up quickly! Logarithmic is like Going DOWN the volcano (gradual descent) — y = log₂(x) rises slowly. They're MIRROR images, like climbing up vs sliding down the same mountain!
Anchor Type
visual_association
Why It Works
Uses iconic Philippine landmark to show the inverse relationship and contrasting growth patterns
Example Usage
Exponential 2³=8 climbs up fast; logarithmic log₂(8)=3 asks 'what power gets us to 8?' — going down the mountain
Recall Trigger
Picture Mayon Volcano when comparing exponential and logarithmic functions
Tags
- method
- sequence
- process
Topic
Factoring
Concept
Factoring Trinomials (ax² + bx + c)
Anchor Id
A13
Difficulty
hard
Memory Aid
Walking Through SM Mall to Find Factor Pairs! Start at the entrance (look at a and c), walk to the fountain (find factors of ac), visit the food court (find pairs that add to b), end at the exit (write the factored form). Each store location helps you remember the next step!
Anchor Type
method_of_loci
Why It Works
Uses familiar mall layout as a mental journey to remember the sequence of factoring steps
Example Usage
For 2x² + 7x + 3: entrance (a=2, c=3), fountain (ac=6), food court (factors 6,1 add to 7), exit (2x+1)(x+3)
Recall Trigger
Take a mental walk through SM Mall when factoring trinomials
Tags
- graphing
- visual
- boundaries
Topic
Linear Inequalities
Concept
Graphing Linear Inequalities
Anchor Id
A14
Difficulty
medium
Memory Aid
Beach Boundary Lines! The inequality line is like a rope marking safe swimming areas. SOLID line (≤, ≥) means you CAN swim ON the rope line. DASHED line (<, >) means the rope is OFF-LIMITS. Shade the safe swimming area where the inequality is true!
Anchor Type
visual_association
Why It Works
Uses beach safety imagery familiar to island-dwelling Filipino students to explain boundary concepts
Example Usage
For y ≥ 2x + 1, draw solid line (can swim on it), test point (0,0): 0 ≥ 1 is false, so shade opposite side
Recall Trigger
Think 'Beach Safety Rope' when graphing inequalities
Tags
- properties
- rules
- classification
Topic
Real Numbers
Concept
Properties of Real Numbers
Anchor Id
A15
Difficulty
easy
Memory Aid
ACID Properties of Math — just like Database ACID! A-ssociative (group differently), C-ommutative (change order), I-dentity (adding 0 or multiplying by 1), D-istributive (distribute multiplication over addition). Like organizing barangay activities efficiently!
Anchor Type
acronym
Why It Works
Connects to computer science ACID concept many students know, plus uses community organization analogy
Example Usage
Commutative: 3 + 5 = 5 + 3 (like switching seating arrangements); Distributive: 2(3 + 4) = 2×3 + 2×4 (distribute gifts equally)
Recall Trigger
Think 'Database ACID' or 'Barangay Organization' for number properties
Tags
- concept
- equation
- distance
Topic
Absolute Value
Concept
Absolute Value Equations
Anchor Id
A16
Difficulty
medium
Memory Aid
Absolute Value is like Distance from Home! |x| asks 'How far from zero?' whether you go left or right on the number line. For |x| = 5, you could be 5 steps left (-5) OR 5 steps right (+5) from home (zero). Same distance, different directions!
Anchor Type
analogy
Why It Works
Uses familiar concept of distance from home to explain why absolute value equations have two solutions
Example Usage
For |2x - 1| = 7, think: what values make the expression 7 steps from zero? Answer: 2x - 1 = 7 or 2x - 1 = -7
Recall Trigger
Think 'Distance from Home' when solving absolute value equations
Tags
- process
- algorithm
- division
Topic
Polynomial Division
Concept
Synthetic Division Process
Anchor Id
A17
Difficulty
hard
Memory Aid
Tito's Sari-Sari Store Inventory! Tito divides products into groups using a special shortcut. He brings down the first item (first coefficient), multiplies by the divider, adds to the next item, repeats the process. The last number tells him if there's leftover stock (remainder)!
Anchor Type
micro_story
Why It Works
Uses familiar neighborhood store scenario to make the mechanical process of synthetic division memorable
Example Usage
Dividing x³ - 2x² + x - 3 by (x - 2): bring down 1, multiply by 2, add to -2, continue pattern until remainder appears
Recall Trigger
Picture Tito organizing his sari-sari store inventory
Tags
- operations
- sequence
- functions
Topic
Function Composition
Concept
Composition of Functions
Anchor Id
A18
Difficulty
hard
Memory Aid
Functions are like Jeepney Transfers! f∘g(x) means you ride jeepney g first, then transfer to jeepney f. Whatever destination g takes you to becomes the starting point for f. Like going from Quezon City to Manila (g) then Manila to Makati (f) — you end up in Makati!
Anchor Type
analogy
Why It Works
Uses familiar public transportation experience to explain the sequential nature of function composition
Example Usage
For f(x)=2x+1 and g(x)=x², find f∘g(3): first g(3)=9, then f(9)=2(9)+1=19
Recall Trigger
Think 'Jeepney Transfer' when composing functions
Tags
- concept
- reflection
- inverse
Topic
Inverse Functions
Concept
Inverse Functions
Anchor Id
A19
Difficulty
hard
Memory Aid
Inverse Functions are like Bahay na Bato Reflections! Original function and its inverse are MIRROR IMAGES across the line y = x, like how old Filipino houses reflect in calm river water. If point (a,b) is on f(x), then point (b,a) is on f⁻¹(x) — perfectly reflected!
Anchor Type
visual_association
Why It Works
Uses beautiful imagery of traditional architecture and water reflections to show the symmetric relationship
Example Usage
If f(2) = 5, then f⁻¹(5) = 2 — like seeing (2,5) become (5,2) in the water's reflection
Recall Trigger
Picture bahay na bato reflecting in water when finding inverse functions
Tags
- classification
- formula
- solutions
Topic
Discriminant
Concept
Discriminant in Quadratic Formula
Anchor Id
A20
Difficulty
medium
Memory Aid
b² - 4ac is the Discriminant Detective! 'Positive means Two Real solutions neat, Zero means One solution sweet, Negative means Complex solutions to meet!' Like a detective solving cases: positive clues = two suspects, zero clues = one suspect, negative clues = imaginary suspects!
Anchor Type
rhyme
Why It Works
Catchy rhyme combined with detective metaphor makes the three cases memorable and fun
Example Usage
For x² + 2x + 5 = 0: b² - 4ac = 4 - 20 = -16 (negative), so detective finds complex solutions
Recall Trigger
Think 'Detective with Clues' when evaluating the discriminant
Revision Game
Elimination Method
Clue
I'm the method where you make coefficients opposites and add equations together to make one variable disappear
Memory Link
TV Game Show Elimination anchor — think of contestants being eliminated
Discriminant
Clue
I'm the part of the quadratic formula that tells you how many real solutions exist
Memory Link
Detective with Clues anchor — discriminant detective finds the clues
Function
Clue
I'm like a rice cooker where domain is what goes in and range is what comes out
Memory Link
Rice Cooker Function anchor — transformation from input to output
Commutative Property
Clue
I'm the property that says 3 + 5 = 5 + 3, like switching seats in a jeepney
Memory Link
ACID Properties anchor — changing order doesn't change result
FOIL Method
Clue
I'm the method that uses FOIL to multiply two binomials together
Memory Link
Filipino Outstanding Intelligence League anchor — basketball play sequence
Absolute Value
Clue
I'm the distance measurement that's always positive, no matter which direction you go
Memory Link
Distance from Home anchor — same distance, different directions
Difference of Squares
Clue
I'm the factoring pattern where a² - b² becomes (a+b)(a-b)
Memory Link
River Between Square Lots anchor — two riverbank sides
Radical Simplification
Clue
I'm the process where Maria takes perfect square factors outside her stall
Memory Link
Maria's Mangosteen Vendor anchor — perfect factors go outside
Formula Mnemonics
Formula
x = [-b ± √(b² - 4ac)] / 2a
Mnemonic
BAYAD SA IKATLONG ARAW — B for negative b, SA for square root, I for inside (b² - 4ac), A for 2a denominator
When To Use
When quadratic equation cannot be factored easily or when you need exact solutions
What Each Part Means
b is coefficient of x term, a is coefficient of x² term, c is constant term, ± means two solutions
Formula
a^m × a^n = a^(m+n)
Mnemonic
SAME BASE SABAY — When bases are the SAME, ADD the exponents together like counting total hours
When To Use
When multiplying powers with the same base
What Each Part Means
a is the common base, m and n are the exponents being added
Formula
(a + b)(a - b) = a² - b²
Mnemonic
DIFFERENCE OF SQUARES DANCING — Plus and Minus dance together to create a² minus b²
When To Use
When factoring expressions of the form a² - b² or multiplying conjugate binomials
What Each Part Means
Two binomials with same terms but opposite operations create difference of squares
Formula
√(a × b) = √a × √b
Mnemonic
RADICAL MULTIPLICATION MAGKAKAIBIGAN — Radicals can multiply like friends sharing the same roof
When To Use
When simplifying radical expressions or multiplying square roots
What Each Part Means
Square root of a product equals the product of square roots
Formula
Distance = √[(x₂-x₁)² + (y₂-y₁)²]
Mnemonic
DIAGONAL DISTANCE DALAWANG PUNTO — Square the differences, add them, take the square root
When To Use
When finding distance between two points on coordinate plane
What Each Part Means
Pythagorean theorem applied to coordinate plane with two points
Formula
Slope = (y₂-y₁)/(x₂-x₁)
Mnemonic
RISE OVER RUN RATIO — Y difference over X difference gives the slope
When To Use
When finding steepness of a line through two points
What Each Part Means
Vertical change divided by horizontal change between two points
Quick Recall Chains
Chain Title
Order of Operations PEMDAS
Recall Test
What operations come before addition in order of operations?
Memory Chain
Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally goes to the palengke: first she Packs (parentheses), then Energizes (exponents), then Multiplies/Divides the ingredients together, finally Adds/Subtracts the final seasonings
Items To Remember
- Parentheses
- Exponents
- Multiplication
- Division
- Addition
- Subtraction
Chain Title
Steps for Solving Linear Equations
Memory Chain
SICI — Si Cardo's Investigation method: Simplify the evidence, Isolate the suspects, Isolate the criminal, Check if guilty
Items To Remember
- Simplify each side
- Isolate variable terms
- Isolate the variable
- Check solution
Chain Title
Types of Conic Sections
Recall Test
Name the four types of conic sections in order
Memory Chain
CEPH — Cebu's Famous Places: Circle-shaped Magellan's Cross, Ellipse-shaped Heritage Monument, Parabola-shaped Sirao Flower Garden arch, Hyperbola-shaped Temple of Leah curves
Items To Remember
- Circle
- Ellipse
- Parabola
- Hyperbola
Chain Title
Properties of Real Numbers
Memory Chain
CAID — Community Association Identity Development: Commute together, Associate with neighbors, Identify with community, Distribute resources fairly
Items To Remember
- Commutative
- Associative
- Identity
- Distributive
Chain Title
Methods for Solving Quadratics
Memory Chain
FSCQ — Filipino Students Can Qualify: Factor if possible, Square root for perfect squares, Complete the square for practice, Quadratic formula for guarantee
Items To Remember
- Factoring
- Square Root Property
- Completing the Square
- Quadratic Formula
Previous chapter
Ratio & Proportion
Next chapter
Word Problems — Number, Age, Work, Motion, Mixture, Investment
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