Math · Algebra

Systems of Linear Equations in Two Variables

Solving systems of two equations using substitution, elimination, or graphs

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Two equations with two unknowns. The SAT asks you to solve, interpret, or determine how many solutions exist.

Why this matters

Students treat every system the same way: solve for x, solve for y, done. But the SAT tests five distinct question types, and the brute-force approach wastes time on most of them. One type asks you to solve directly. Another asks you to find an expression without solving at all. A third hands you a graph and asks you to read the answer. Knowing which type you are looking at changes your entire approach.

The five patterns

The biggest trap: solving for individual variables when the question asks for an expression. If they want 2m, subtract the equations and get 2m in one step. Solving for m first, then multiplying by 2, doubles your work and doubles your chance of an arithmetic mistake.