Solve linear systems of two equations by substitution, elimination, and word problems. 45 problems across three tiers: Algebra I (simple substitution and system identification), Algebra II (multi-step elimination, multi-step substitution, and real-world word problems), and Advanced (parametric systems, fractional coefficients, three-variable extensions, and SAT-style applications).

Review the Method Cards
The lobby shows two method cards with the core logic of Substitution and Elimination. Substitution: solve one equation for a variable, then plug that expression into the other. Elimination: multiply equations so a variable's coefficients match, then add or subtract to cancel it.
Choose a Difficulty
Algebra I stays with simple substitution where one equation is already in the form y = … or x = …. Algebra II requires choosing the right method and sometimes multiplying an equation first. Advanced adds parametric ('find k') problems, fractional equations, and multi-step word problems common on the SAT.
Pick the Right Method
Read the problem and look for clues: if one equation is already solved for a variable, use Substitution. If the equations have matching or opposite coefficients on one variable (like +3y and −3y), use Elimination by adding. If you need to create matching coefficients, multiply one equation first. The category badge (SUBSTITUTE, ELIMINATE, IDENTIFY, APPLY) tells you which skill is being tested.
Check and Learn
After answering, the step-by-step strategy appears regardless of whether you were right. For identification questions, the hint explains the geometric meaning (parallel lines, same line, or intersecting lines). For word problems, it shows how to set up the equations from the scenario.
45 Problems Across 3 Tiers
Algebra I covers simple substitution — one equation already solved for a variable — and system identification (one solution, no solution, infinitely many). Algebra II adds multi-step substitution, the elimination (addition/subtraction) method with multiplier steps, and word problems translating real scenarios into systems. Advanced includes parametric systems (find the value of k that creates a special case), fractional coefficients, three-number sum puzzles, and classic SAT applications like distance-rate-time and investment problems.
4 Problem Types — Color-Coded
SUBSTITUTE (violet) presents systems best solved by plugging one expression into the other. ELIMINATE (purple) features problems where adding or subtracting the equations cancels a variable directly. IDENTIFY (indigo) asks about the nature of the system — how many solutions exist or what parameter value creates a special case. APPLY (blue) wraps the algebra in a real-world context like ticket pricing, boat speed, or account interest.
Coordinate Grid Lobby Visual
The lobby features a live mini coordinate plane with two intersecting lines and a labeled solution point, illustrating exactly what 'solving a system' means geometrically. The two method cards (Substitution and Elimination) explain when to use each approach before you start.
Step-by-Step Strategy Hints
Each hint names the method being used and walks through the key algebraic steps — which equation to manipulate first, which variable to isolate, and which arithmetic operation eliminates it. Hints appear as 'Strategy:' notes to reinforce metacognitive problem-solving habits.
Three methods: (1) Substitution — isolate one variable and substitute; (2) Elimination — add or subtract equations to cancel a variable, sometimes after multiplying to match coefficients; (3) Identification — determine the number of solutions by comparing slopes and y-intercepts (or their ratio forms) without solving.
Use substitution when one equation is already solved for a variable (e.g., y = 2x + 3) or when isolating a variable is quick (coefficient of 1 or −1). Use elimination when the equations have matching or opposite coefficients on one variable, or when multiplying one equation by a small integer creates a match. Both methods always give the same answer — it's a matter of efficiency.
No solution means the lines are parallel — same slope, different y-intercepts. They never meet. Infinitely many solutions means the lines are identical — every point on one line is also on the other. Both cases are detectable without solving: if the ratio of x-coefficients equals the ratio of y-coefficients but not the constants, the system has no solution; if all three ratios are equal, it has infinitely many.
Correct answers earn 10 pts (Algebra I), 15 pts (Algebra II), or 20 pts (Advanced). Consecutive correct answers add a 5-point streak bonus per answer after the first. A wrong answer resets the streak to zero.
Advanced problems include: parametric questions (for what value of k does this system have no solution / infinitely many solutions), which require understanding when ratios of coefficients are equal; fractional-coefficient systems; three-variable extension problems where you derive x + y + z from three pairwise sums; and classic SAT word problems (boat + current, investment interest split, trains approaching each other).
Yes. Systems of equations appear on every SAT math section. Common SAT question types include: finding the number of solutions, solving for one variable in terms of another within a system, word problems that require setting up two equations, and parametric questions asking for the value of a coefficient that produces a special case. The Advanced tier covers all of these.