USTET Mathematics — Word Problems — Number, Age, Work, Motion, Mixture, InvestmentMisconception Buster
Avoid the most common Word Problems — Number, Age, Work, Motion, Mixture, Investment mistakes made by USTET reviewers. Each misconception here has been pulled from real USTET Mathematics questions where University of Santo Tomas used it to separate strong reviewers from weak ones. Learn these before your next mock.
Exam context
On the USTET 2026, the Mathematics subtest carries a "Core section" weight in University of Santo Tomas's pattern. Word Problems — Number, Age, Work, Motion, Mixture, Investment lands at position 4th out of 9 in the standard review order. Target score is Competitive overall score, and roughly a meaningful share of items come from Mathematics on a typical USTET paper.
Word Problems — Number, Age, Work, Motion, Mixture, Investment - Misconception buster
Word problems are often the make-or-break section in UPCAT and other entrance exams, yet students consistently lose marks due to preventable misconceptions. These aren't just calculation errors - they're fundamental misunderstandings about how to translate real-world scenarios into mathematical equations. Understanding these misconceptions is crucial because word problems typically carry high point values in exams, and a single misconception can cascade through multiple steps, leading to completely wrong answers. This guide exposes the most dangerous misconceptions that cause students to fail word problems, even when they know the underlying math concepts perfectly well.
Summary
The most critical insight is that word problems aren't just math problems with extra words - they require careful translation where the biggest errors occur in the translation phase, not the calculation phase. Students who master the translation rules (especially the 'less than' and 'subtracted from' reversals), understand time relationships in age problems, and recognize that rates add in work problems will dramatically improve their word problem success rate. Remember: most word problem errors stem from misunderstanding what the variables represent and how quantities relate to each other, not from algebraic manipulation mistakes. Always check if your final answer makes sense in the real-world context of the problem.
Misconceptions
When translating 'less than' phrases, students keep the numbers in the same order as written
Tags
- common_error
- translation_error
- critical_mistake
Topic
Number Problems - Translation
Severity
critical
Exam Impact
This error appears in nearly every word problem type and leads to completely wrong equations. Students lose full marks even if their algebraic solving is perfect.
The Reality
'4 less than x' means x with 4 subtracted from it, which is 'x - 4', not '4 - x'. The phrase describes what happens TO the first number mentioned (x), not a subtraction starting with 4.
Trap Question
Question
If 3 less than four times a number equals 17, what equation represents this statement?
Explanation
'3 less than four times a number' means we start with 4x and subtract 3 from it, giving us 4x - 3. The incorrect answer 3 - 4x would represent '3 minus four times a number' which is completely different.
Wrong Answer
3 - 4x = 17
Correct Answer
4x - 3 = 17
Misconception Id
M1
Correct Vs Incorrect
Correct Approach
Read '5 less than twice a number' → Think 'twice a number, with 5 subtracted' → Write '2x - 5'
Incorrect Approach
Read '5 less than twice a number' → Write '5 - 2x' (following word order)
Why Students Believe It
Students read '4 less than x' and naturally write '4 - x' because that's the order the words appear. It seems logical to translate word-for-word without considering the mathematical meaning.
In age problems, students use the same variable for different time periods
Tags
- time_confusion
- variable_misuse
- critical_mistake
Topic
Age Problems
Severity
critical
Exam Impact
Age problems become unsolvable when students use incorrect age representations. This misconception makes the resulting equations meaningless.
The Reality
If John is x years old now, then 5 years ago he was (x-5) years old, and 3 years from now he will be (x+3) years old. The variable represents age at ONE specific point in time.
Trap Question
Question
Anna is twice as old as Ben today. Five years ago, Anna was three times as old as Ben. If Ben is x years old today, what was Anna's age five years ago?
Explanation
Anna is 2x years old today, so five years ago she was (2x - 5) years old. The wrong answer 2x represents her current age, not her age five years ago.
Wrong Answer
2x
Correct Answer
2x - 5
Misconception Id
M2
Correct Vs Incorrect
Correct Approach
If Maria is x years old now, then 2 years ago she was (x-2) years old
Incorrect Approach
If Maria is x years old now, then 2 years ago she was also x years old
Why Students Believe It
Students think if John is x years old now, then x also represents his age in the past or future, forgetting that age changes over time.
In work problems, students add the times instead of adding the rates
Tags
- rate_confusion
- addition_error
- critical_mistake
Topic
Work Problems
Severity
critical
Exam Impact
This misconception leads to answers that are physically impossible (combined work taking longer than individual work) and loses all marks in work problems.
The Reality
When workers combine efforts, you add their work rates (jobs per hour), not their completion times. If A completes 1/3 job per hour and B completes 1/6 job per hour, together they complete 1/3 + 1/6 = 1/2 job per hour.
Trap Question
Question
Machine A can produce 100 widgets in 2 hours. Machine B can produce 100 widgets in 3 hours. How long will it take both machines working together to produce 100 widgets?
Explanation
Machine A's rate: 1/2 job per hour. Machine B's rate: 1/3 job per hour. Combined rate: 1/2 + 1/3 = 5/6 job per hour. Time needed: 1 ÷ (5/6) = 6/5 = 1.2 hours. The wrong answer adds the individual times, which would mean working together is slower than working individually.
Wrong Answer
5 hours
Correct Answer
1.2 hours
Misconception Id
M3
Correct Vs Incorrect
Correct Approach
Carlos works at 1/4 job/hour, David at 1/6 job/hour → Together: 1/4 + 1/6 = 5/12 job/hour → Time = 1 ÷ (5/12) = 12/5 = 2.4 hours
Incorrect Approach
Carlos finishes in 4 hours, David in 6 hours → Together they take 4 + 6 = 10 hours
Why Students Believe It
Students think that if Worker A takes 3 hours and Worker B takes 6 hours, then together they take 3 + 6 = 9 hours, which seems intuitive.
In motion problems, students confuse distance relationships when objects move in opposite directions versus same direction
Tags
- direction_confusion
- distance_relationship
- major_error
Topic
Motion Problems
Severity
major
Exam Impact
Motion problems require careful analysis of the physical situation. Wrong distance relationships lead to incorrect equations and wrong final answers.
The Reality
When objects move toward each other (meeting), add their distances. When one object chases another (overtaking), set their distances equal. When objects move away from each other, add their distances to get total separation.
Trap Question
Question
Two trains leave stations 480 km apart at the same time and travel toward each other. Train A travels at 80 kph and Train B at 100 kph. What equation represents when they meet?
Explanation
Since the trains are moving toward each other, their combined distances must equal the initial separation. After time t, Train A travels 80t km and Train B travels 100t km, and together they cover the full 480 km distance.
Wrong Answer
80t = 100t
Correct Answer
80t + 100t = 480
Misconception Id
M4
Correct Vs Incorrect
Correct Approach
Two cars start 300km apart and drive toward each other → Add their distances: 60t + 40t = 300
Incorrect Approach
Two cars start 300km apart and drive toward each other → Set their distances equal: 60t = 40t
Why Students Believe It
Students always add distances regardless of the scenario, or they always set distances equal, without considering whether objects are meeting, separating, or one is chasing the other.
In mixture problems, students confuse the amount of solution with the amount of pure substance
Tags
- percentage_confusion
- concentration_error
- major_error
Topic
Mixture Problems
Severity
major
Exam Impact
Mixture problems become impossible to solve correctly when students misunderstand what the percentages represent. This leads to wrong equations and meaningless answers.
The Reality
In a 20% salt solution, only 20% of the total volume is pure salt, while 80% is water. The amount of pure salt = (percentage) × (total volume of solution), not just the total volume.
Trap Question
Question
How much pure acid is in 200 mL of a 25% acid solution?
Explanation
A 25% acid solution means 25% of the total volume is pure acid. So 0.25 × 200 mL = 50 mL of pure acid. The remaining 150 mL is water or other solvents.
Wrong Answer
200 mL
Correct Answer
50 mL
Misconception Id
M5
Correct Vs Incorrect
Correct Approach
500 mL of 30% acid solution contains 0.30 × 500 = 150 mL of pure acid and 350 mL of water
Incorrect Approach
500 mL of 30% acid solution contains 500 mL of pure acid
Why Students Believe It
Students see percentages and immediately multiply by the total volume, forgetting that the percentage refers only to the pure substance (solute), not the entire solution.
Students think interest rate percentages can be used directly in calculations without converting to decimals
Tags
- percentage_error
- decimal_conversion
- major_error
Topic
Investment Problems
Severity
major
Exam Impact
Investment and interest problems yield completely unrealistic answers (like earning more in interest than the principal invested), making it obvious the calculation is wrong.
The Reality
Percentages must be converted to decimals for calculations. 5% = 5/100 = 0.05. Using 5 instead of 0.05 gives answers that are 100 times too large.
Trap Question
Question
If ₱5,000 is invested at 6% simple annual interest, how much interest is earned after 2 years?
Explanation
Using the formula I = PRT: I = 5,000 × 0.06 × 2 = ₱600. The wrong answer uses 6 instead of 0.06, giving an impossible result where interest exceeds the principal by 12 times.
Wrong Answer
₱60,000
Correct Answer
₱600
Misconception Id
M6
Correct Vs Incorrect
Correct Approach
₱10,000 at 8% for 1 year earns: 10,000 × 0.08 × 1 = ₱800 interest
Incorrect Approach
₱10,000 at 8% for 1 year earns: 10,000 × 8 × 1 = ₱80,000 interest
Why Students Believe It
When they see '5% interest', students use 5 in their calculations instead of 0.05, thinking percentages work the same as regular numbers in multiplication.
In consecutive integer problems, students use consecutive terms that differ by 1 for both even and odd sequences
Tags
- sequence_error
- pattern_confusion
- major_error
Topic
Number Problems - Consecutive Integers
Severity
major
Exam Impact
Problems asking for consecutive odd or even integers become unsolvable when students use the wrong pattern, leading to non-integer answers or answers that don't satisfy the odd/even condition.
The Reality
Consecutive integers differ by 1, but consecutive odd integers (1, 3, 5, 7) and consecutive even integers (2, 4, 6, 8) each differ by 2. If x is odd, the next odd integer is x + 2, not x + 1.
Trap Question
Question
The sum of three consecutive odd integers is 51. What is the middle integer?
Explanation
Let the integers be x, x+2, x+4. Then x + (x+2) + (x+4) = 51, so 3x + 6 = 51, giving x = 15. The three integers are 15, 17, 19, so the middle integer is 17. Using x, x+1, x+2 would give non-odd integers.
Wrong Answer
16
Correct Answer
17
Misconception Id
M7
Correct Vs Incorrect
Correct Approach
Three consecutive even integers: x, x+2, x+4
Incorrect Approach
Three consecutive even integers: x, x+1, x+2
Why Students Believe It
Students know consecutive integers differ by 1 (like 5, 6, 7) and assume this applies to consecutive odd or consecutive even integers as well.
Students reverse the digits incorrectly when solving digit problems
Tags
- representation_error
- reversal_confusion
- minor_error
Topic
Number Problems - Digit Problems
Severity
minor
Exam Impact
Digit problems set up incorrect equations when students don't properly represent the reversed number, leading to wrong relationships between digits.
The Reality
If the original number is 10x + y (where x is tens digit, y is ones digit), then the reversed number is 10y + x (y becomes tens digit, x becomes ones digit). The coefficients change, not just the variable names.
Trap Question
Question
A two-digit number has tens digit x and ones digit y. If the original number is 12 more than the reversed number, what equation represents this relationship?
Explanation
The original number 10x + y is compared to the reversed number 10y + x. The correct equation shows that the original is 12 more than the reversed number.
Wrong Answer
(10x + y) = (10x + y) + 12
Correct Answer
(10x + y) = (10y + x) + 12
Misconception Id
M8
Correct Vs Incorrect
Correct Approach
Original: 10x + y, Reversed: 10y + x (positions switched)
Incorrect Approach
Original: 10x + y, Reversed: 10x + y (same expression)
Why Students Believe It
When dealing with a two-digit number like 'tens digit = x, ones digit = y', students think reversing means swapping variable names instead of swapping positions.
Students think compound interest is calculated by simply multiplying simple interest by the number of compounding periods
Tags
- compound_error
- exponential_growth
- minor_error
Topic
Investment Problems - Compound Interest
Severity
minor
Exam Impact
Investment problems involving compound interest yield incorrect final amounts, though this topic appears less frequently in entrance exams compared to simple interest.
The Reality
Compound interest grows exponentially because each period's interest is calculated on the previous total (principal + accumulated interest), not just on the original principal. The formula is A = P(1 + r)^t for annual compounding.
Trap Question
Question
₱2,000 is invested at 5% annual interest compounded annually for 2 years. What is the final amount?
Explanation
Year 1: ₱2,000 × 1.05 = ₱2,100. Year 2: ₱2,100 × 1.05 = ₱2,205. The compound formula gives 2,000(1.05)² = ₱2,205. Simple interest approach incorrectly gives 2,000 + (2 × 100) = ₱2,200.
Wrong Answer
₱2,200
Correct Answer
₱2,205
Misconception Id
M9
Correct Vs Incorrect
Correct Approach
₱1,000 at 10% compounded for 3 years: 1,000(1.10)³ = ₱1,331
Incorrect Approach
₱1,000 at 10% compounded for 3 years: 1,000 + (3 × 1,000 × 0.10) = ₱1,300
Why Students Believe It
Students understand simple interest and think compound interest just means applying simple interest multiple times in a straightforward multiplication.
Students assume all quantities in word problems must be positive numbers
Tags
- sign_assumptions
- solution_validity
- minor_error
Topic
Number Problems - General
Severity
minor
Exam Impact
Students might reject correct solutions or set up additional unnecessary constraints, though this rarely affects the core problem-solving process.
The Reality
While final answers for physical quantities are usually positive, intermediate steps in solving can involve negative numbers, and variables can represent differences that might be negative. Always check if your answer makes sense in context.
Trap Question
Question
The difference between two numbers is 8. If three times the smaller number equals twice the larger number, what are the numbers?
Explanation
Let x be the smaller number. Then x + 8 is the larger number. From 3x = 2(x + 8), we get 3x = 2x + 16, so x = 16. Both numbers (16 and 24) are positive. Students might incorrectly reject valid solutions involving negative intermediate steps.
Wrong Answer
The problem has no solution because one number would be negative
Correct Answer
The numbers are 16 and 8
Misconception Id
M10
Correct Vs Incorrect
Correct Approach
Getting x = -5 might indicate an error in setup, or it might be part of solving for a different quantity where negative intermediate values are acceptable
Incorrect Approach
Getting x = -5 for someone's current age and automatically assuming the solution is wrong
Why Students Believe It
In real-world contexts, quantities like age, distance, and time are typically positive, so students automatically assume their variables must yield positive answers.
Quick Self Check
'5 less than x' means x with 5 subtracted from it, which is 'x - 5', not '5 - x'.
Statement
The phrase '5 less than x' translates to '5 - x'
Age decreases as we go back in time, so 3 years ago John was 3 years younger than his current age.
Statement
If John is x years old now, then 3 years ago he was (x - 3) years old
You add their work rates (portion of job completed per unit time), then take the reciprocal to find completion time.
Statement
When two workers combine efforts, you add their completion times to find the total time
The percentage in a solution always refers to the concentration of the solute (pure substance) in the total solution.
Statement
In a 15% salt solution, 15% of the total volume is pure salt
Consecutive even integers (like 2, 4, 6) differ by 2, not 1.
Statement
Consecutive even integers differ by 1
Percentages must be converted to decimals for mathematical calculations: 8% = 8/100 = 0.08.
Statement
An 8% interest rate should be written as 0.08 in calculations
When objects move toward each other, you add their distances to equal the initial separation distance.
Statement
When objects move toward each other, their distances should be set equal to solve for meeting time
Compound interest grows exponentially, not linearly. Each period's interest is calculated on the new principal (original + accumulated interest).
Statement
Compound interest can be calculated by multiplying simple interest by the number of compounding periods
Previous chapter
Algebra — Sets, Exponents, Radicals, Polynomials & Equations
Next chapter
Geometry — Lines, Angles, Polygons, Triangles & Circles
Ready to practise for the USTET 2026?
Super Tutor's AI review plan adapts to your weak areas and builds a weekly practice schedule around your target USTET exam date.