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As an adult, I was given this as a gift and find it very entertaining. My husband immediately went through the questions testing his knowledge and I went through to read the questions and answers because they are witty and very clever.This makes a great gift for your smart adult friends as well as their kids.
I looked forward to receiving this and was very disappointed. The questions are very obscure, more academic than interesting. I prefer the original Trivial Pursuit Questions.
Great resource for my high school son who is a Scholastic Team Captain.
Future Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall argued the case). I'm a trivia buff and am always on the look out for little games to not only study for myself, but to use in the classroom during downtime. A typical arts & humanities question revolves around vocabulary, for example, "Professor A is a sybarite. A social sciences question reads, "Brown vs. What was decided, and who argued the case for Brown and the other parents." (Brown and 13 other black parents would be allowed to enroll their 20 children in an all-white Kansas school. For example a typical math question is "How many variables are in the equation ax2 + bx + c = 0. The sub title of these cards is "600 Facts Every Smart Person Should Know" but it should read "600 Facts Every Person Who Wants to Do Well on the SAT or ACT Should Know" because most of the questions are oriented for people studying for standardized tests like those.
(one the x) And for extra credit, what formula is this. (the quadratic equation)". THE BRAINIAC BOX includes 600 cards that are divided into three categories: blue for math & science, green for arts & humanities, and maroon for social sciences. (Professor A)". There aren't very many questions about the arts, literature, or other humanities. Board of Education of Topeka (1954) was a landmark Supreme Court decision. Trivia buffs might enjoy it, but not as much as studying students, but there are some gems. How can you feed each child equally without using fractions." The answer: "Serve them mashed potatoes." Overall, this is a nice gift for a student studying for a standardized test.
I've only made it through about half the cards in the box, but have been a little disappointed. There are some questions that are more entertaining and not as strictly didactic. Professor B is stultified. Who's cool in school. For example, my favorite card so far was one from math & science, "You have 5 potatoes and 7 children. This is also a good gift for high school teachers to use during down time.
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