@@GEDMastery Hi. I just wanted to let you know that I passed the ged science test yesterday. And I just wanted to say thank you. Because you’ve helped me out a lot. 😊 Now I’ll be taking the ged math test in November!!
G here is just a constant, and it is substituted into the formula for gravitational force. I didn't write the N (m2/kg2) next to the value for G when I substituted it into the gravitational force formula for simplicity, but the m2/kg2 would cancel out with the other units in the formula (the m2 would be divided by m2 on the bottom [because you are squaring the radius, which would result in m2] and cancel out, while the kg2 in the bottom of the fraction for the G value would cancel out with the two masses that you have to multiply on top [resulting in kg2]). Thus we are left with N, which stands for Newtons, the unit of measure for force (just like kg [kilograms] is a unit of measure for mass and m [meters] is a unit of measure for length). And we know that's the only unit of measure we want because we are looking for force. Does this help at all? If not, I can do an in-depth video on how these variables cancel out.
I studied rigorously for quite some time, covering a wide range of math topics. My test is tomorrow, never did I expect to struggle with solving the problems in this video 😂 it's the same mathematical concepts that I'm familiar with, but stated in unfamiliar terms. I needed this.
Great, glad it was helpful! Yes, even if the concept is familiar, once the question is changed to a word problem, it can throw you off. Good luck on your test today!!
@@GEDMastery I scored a 165, which is " college ready ." 🔥🔥🔥This is amazing , considering the fact that i am a high school dropout whose weakest subject is math.
Yes, so the topics GED lists (reading and meaning in science; designing and interpreting science experiments; using numbers and graphics in science) are the skills seen at 1:13, and you could see any of those skills tested in the three different content areas (life science, physical science, earth/space science). For example, if you're being tested on "designing and interpreting science experiments," you could read about a science experiment having to do with fish reproduction (life science). Or, if you're being tested on interpreting graphs, you could see a graph on solubility (physical science). So while the test is skill based, knowing a bit of content will give you vocabulary and background information that will make applying those skills easier.
Excellent! Thank you very much. Your videos are very helpful. With your videos i can have confidence that I'll pass the Ged science. Please, if you can do math videos next. God bless!!🙏
So glad they're helpful. Yes, I'm working on a math practice test right now and then will do math lessons by topic. If there's any particular topic you'd like, let me know and I'll work on it first!
You got it! Here's a new video on ecosystems: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Sfqky-mDQO8.html. I'll be working on some more science content too. Let me know if there's a specific topic you'd like that you don't see yet.
Glad they are useful! If there's any particular topic you'd like, let me know, and I'll make a video on that. Otherwise, I'll keep working through the GED curriculum.