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Antique Dealer

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Math

Being an antique dealer requires knowledge in all fields, and math is one of them. Pieces of art, furniture and precious jewelry are being auctioned off at halls. Knowledgeable competitors from your field are armed to fight for a deal.

You firmly grasp onto your auction number in one hand while forming a tight fist to relieve anxiety, frustration and excitement with the other. So where is the hand to hold your calculator?

According to antique dealer William Leigh Carnegie, the most powerful calculator is the human brain. "Everyday math is used in our business. Most transactions or inventory work is done in our heads and is handwritten."

You're exhausted, but you have finally accomplished your one-week mission of attending various auctions around the world. You have helped your boss claim some very precious pieces. Your boss wants you to come back with a total, in American dollars, of all the purchases you made at the auctions. You take out your stacks of receipts and start sorting them according to the different countries. Then you grab the newspaper and find out the current exchange rates.

After finding out all the exchange rates, you convert each of the purchases into American dollars by dividing the price by the exchange rate.

Country of PurchaseItemPriceExchange Rates
SwitzerlandMozart's diary2,415,000 francs$1 US = 1.32 francs
FranceVincent van Gogh painting600,000 euro$1 US = 0.86 euro
U.K.Michelangelo painting980,000 pounds$1 US = 0.6 pounds
SwedenFigurine3,773,000 krona$1 US = 7.74 krona

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    From outside the U.S., please call +1 (424) 750-3900
  • North Dakota Career Resource Network
    ndcrn@nd.gov | (701) 328-9733

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