Thinking Mathematically - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 65
About This Presentation
Title:

Thinking Mathematically

Description:

Thinking Mathematically Algebra 1 By: A.J. Mueller Properties Proprieties Addition Property (of Equality) 4+5=9 Multiplication Property (of Equality) 5 8=40 Reflexive ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:120
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 66
Provided by: pcinstall
Learn more at: http://faculty.muhs.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Thinking Mathematically


1
Thinking Mathematically
  • Algebra 1
  • By A.J. Mueller

2
Properties
3
Proprieties
  • Addition Property (of Equality)
  • 459
  • Multiplication Property (of Equality)
  • 5?840
  • Reflexive Property (of Equality)
  • 1212
  • Symmetric Property (of Equality)
  • If ab then ba

4
Proprieties
  • Transitive Property (of Equality)
  • If ab and bc then ac
  • Associative Property of Addition
  • (0.65.3)4.70.6(5.34.7)
  • Associative Property of Multiplication
  • (-5?7) 3-5(7?3)
  • Commutative Property of Addition
  • 2xx2

5
Proprieties
  • Communicative Property of Multiplication
  • b3a2a2b3
  • Distributive Property
  • 5(2x7) 10x35
  • Prop. of Opposites or Inverse Property of
    Addition
  • a(-a)0 and (-a)a0
  • Prop. of Reciprocals or Inverse Prop. of
    Multiplication
  • x2/77/x21

6
Proprieties
  • Identity Property of Addition
  • -50-5
  • Identity Property of Multiplication
  • x?1x
  • Multiplicative Property of Zero
  • 5?00
  • Closure Property of Addition
  • For real a and b, ab is a real number

7
Proprieties
  • Closure Property of Multiplication
  • ab ba
  • Product of Powers Property
  • x3x4x7
  • Power of a Product Property
  • (pq)7p7q7
  • Power of a Power Property
  • (n2) 3

8
Proprieties
  • Quotient of Powers Property
  • X5/x3x2
  • Power of a Quotient Property
  • (a/b) 2
  • Zero Power Property
  • (9ab)01
  • Negative Power Property
  • h-21/h2

9
Proprieties
  • Zero Product Property
  • ab0, then a0 or b0
  • Product of Roots Property
  • v20 v4v5
  • Power of a Root Property
  • (v7) 27

10
Solving 1st Power Inequalities in One Variable
11
Solving 1st Power Inequalities in One Variable
  • With only one inequality sign

x gt -5
Solution Set x x gt -5
Graph of the Solution
12
Conjunctions
  • Open endpoint for these symbols gt lt
  • Closed endpoint for these symbols or
  • Conjunction must satisfy both conditions
  • Conjunction AND

x -4 lt x 9
13
Disjunctions
  • Open endpoint for these symbols gt lt
  • Closed endpoint for these symbols or
  • Disjunction must satisfy either one or both of
    the conditions
  • Disjunction OR

x x lt -4 or x 7
14
Special Cases That All Reals
  • Watch for special cases
  • No solutions that work Answer is Ø
  • Every number works Answer is reals
  • Disjunction in same direction answer is one arrow

x x gt -5 or x 1
15
Special Cases That
x -x lt -2 and -5x 15
16
Linear equations in two variables
17
Linear equations in two variables
  • Lots to cover here slopes of all types of
    lines equations of all types of lines,
    standard/general form, point-slope form, how to
    graph, how to find intercepts, how and when to
    use the point-slope formula, etc. Remember you
    can make lovely graphs in Geometer's Sketchpad
    and copy and paste them into PPT.

18
Important Formulas
  • Slope-
  • Standard/General form- axbxc
  • Point-slope form-
  • Use point-slope formula when you know 4 points on
    2 lines.
  • Vertex-
  • X-intercepts- set f(x) to 0 then solve
  • Y-intercepts- set the x in the f(x) to 0 and then
    solve

19
Examples of Linear Equations
  • Example 1
  • y-3/4x-1

20
Examples of Linear Equations
  • Example 2
  • 3x-2y6 (Put into standard form)
  • 2y-3x6 (Divide by 2)
  • y-3/2x6 (Then graph)

21
Linear Systems
22
Substitution Method
  • Goal replace one variablewith an equal
    expression

Step 1 Look for a variable with a coefficient
of one. Step 2 Isolate that variable Equation
A now becomes y 3x 1 Step 3 SUBSTITUTE
this expression into that variable in Equation
B Equation B now becomes 7x 2( 3x 1 ) -
4 Step 4 Solve for the remaining variable Step
5 Back-substitute this coordinate into Step 2 to
find the other coordinate. (Or plug into any
equation but step 2 is easiest!)
23
Addition/ Subtraction (Elimination) Method
  • Goal Combine equations to cancel out one
    variable.

Step 1 Look for the LCM of the coefficients on
either x or y. (Opposite signs are recommended
to avoid errors.) Here -3y and 2y could be
turned into -6y and 6y Step 2 Multiply each
equation by the necessary factor. Equation A now
becomes 10x 6y 10 Equation B
now becomes 9x 6y -48 Step 3 ADD the two
equations if using opposite signs (if not,
subtract) Step 4 Solve for the remaining
variable Step 5 Back-substitute this coordinate
into any equation to find the other coordinate.
(Look for easiest coefficients to work with.)
24
Factoring
25
Types of Factoring
  • Greatest Common Factor (GFC)
  • Difference of Squares
  • Sun and Difference of Cubes
  • Reverse FOIL
  • Perfect Square Trinomial
  • Factoring by Grouping (3x1 and 2x2)

26
GFC
  • To find the GCF, you just look for the variable
    or number each of the numbers have in common.
  • Example 1
  • x25x15
  • x(2515)

27
Difference of Squares
  • Example 1
  • 27x475y4
  • 3(9x425y4)
  • 3(3x25y2)(3x2-5y2)
  • Example 2
  • 45x6-81y4
  • 9(5x4-9y4)

28
Sun and Difference of Cubes
  • Example 1
  • (8x327)
  • (2x3)
  • (4x2-6x9)
  • Example 2
  • (p3-q3)
  • (p-q) (p2pqq2)

29
Reverse FOIL
  • Example 1
  • x2-19x-32
  • (x8)(x-4)
  • Example 2
  • 6y2-15y12
  • (3y-4)(2y-3)

30
Perfect Square Trinomial
  • Example 1
  • 4y230y25
  • (2y5) 2
  • Example 2
  • x2-10x25
  • (x-5) 2

31
Factoring By Grouping
  • 3x1
  • Example 1
  • a24a4-b2
  • (a4a4)-(b2)
  • (a2)-(b2)
  • (a2-b)(a2b)

32
Factoring by Grouping
  • 2x2
  • Example 1
  • 2xy24x4y
  • xy2y4xy

33
Quadratic Equations
34
Factoring Method
  • Set equal to zero
  • Factor
  • Use the Zero Product Property to solve.
  • Each variable equal to zero.

35
Factoring Method Examples
  • Any of terms- look for GCF first
  • Example 1
  • 2x28x (subtract 8x to set equation equal to
    zero)
  • 2x2-8x0 (now factor out the GCF)
  • 2x(x-4)0

36
Factoring Method Examples
  • Set 2x0, divide 2 on both sides and x0
  • Set x-40, add 4 to both sides and x4
  • x is equal to 0 or 4
  • The answer is 0,4

37
Factoring Method- Binomials
  • Binomials Look for Difference of Squares
  • Example 1
  • x281 (subtract 81 from both sides)
  • x2-810 (factoring equation into conjugates)
  • (x9)(x-9)0
  • x90 or x-90

38
Factoring Method- Binomials
  • x90 (subtract 9 from both sides)
  • x-9
  • x-90 (add 9 to both sides)
  • x9
  • The answer is -9,9

39
Factoring Method-Trinomials
  • Trinomials Look for PST
  • Example 1
  • x2-9x-18 (add 18 to both sides)
  • x2-9x180 (x2-9x18 is a PST)
  • (x-9)(x-9)0
  • x-90 (add 9 to both sides) x9
  • The answer is 9d.r. d.r.- double root

40
Square Roots of Both Sides
  • Reorder terms IF needed
  • Works whenever form is (glob)2 c
  • Take square roots of both sides
  • Simplify the square root if needed
  • Solve for x, or in other words isolate x.

41
Square Roots Of Both Sides
  • Example 1
  • (Factor out the GCF)
  • 2(x2-6x-2)0 (You can get rid of the 2 because it
    does not play a role in this type of equation)
  • x2-6-2x0 (Add the 2 to both sides)
  • x2-6x__2__ (Take half of the middle number which
    right now is 6)
  • x2-6x929 (Simplify)

42
Square Roots Of Both Sides
  • (x-3)11 (Then take the square root of both
    sides)
  • (x-3) 11 (Continue to simplifying)
  • (Add the 3 to both sides)
  • (Final Answer)

43
Completing the Square
  • Example 1
  • 2x2-12x-40 (Factor out the GCF)
  • 2(x2-6x-2)0 (You can get rid of the 2 because it
    does not play a role in this type of equation)
  • x2-6-2x0 (Add the 2 to both sides)
  • x2-6x__2__ (Take half of the middle number which
    right now is 6)
  • x2-6x929 (Simplify)

44
Completing the Square
  • (x-3)11 (Then take the square root of both
    sides)
  • v(x-3) /-v11 (Continue to simplifying)
  • (x-3)/- v11 (Add the 3 to both sides)
  • x3/- v11 (Final Answer)

45
Quadratic Formula
  • This is a formula you will need to memorize!
  • Works to solve all quadratic equations
  • Rewrite in standard form in order to identify the
    values of a, b and c.
  • Plug a, b c into the formula and simplify!
  • QUADRATIC FORMULA

46
Quadratic Formula Examples
  • Example 1
  • 3x2-6x212x
  • Put this in standard form 2x2-12x-60
  • Put into quadratic formula

47
Quadratic Formula Examples
48
The Discriminant Making Predictions
  • b2-4ac2 is called the discriminant
  • Four Cases

1. b2 4ac positive non-square? two irrational
roots
2. b2 4ac positive square? two rational roots
3. b2 4ac zero? one rational double root
4. b2 4ac negative? no real roots
49
The Discriminant Making Predictions
Use the discriminant to predict how many roots
each equation will have.
1. x2 7x 2 0
494(1)(-2)57 ?2 irrational roots
2. 0 2x2 3x 1
94(2)(1)1 ? 2 rational roots
3. 0 5x2 2x 3
44(5)(3)-56 ? no real roots
4. x2 10x 250
1004(1)(25)0 ? 1 rational double root
50
The Discriminant Making Predictions
  • The zeros of a function are the x-intercepts on
    its graph. Use the discriminant to predict how
    many x-intercepts each parabola will have and
    where the vertex is located.

1. y 2x2 x - 6
14(2)(-6)49 ? 2 rational zeros opens up/vertex
below x-axis/2 x-intercepts
2. f(x) 2x2 x 6
14(2)(6)-47 ? no real zeros opens up/vertex
above x-axis/No x-intercepts
51
The Discriminant Making Predictions

814(-2)(6)129 ?2 irrational zeros opens
down/vertex above x-axis/2 x-intercepts
3. y -2x2 9x 6
4. f(x) x2 6x 9
364(1)(9)0 ? one rational zero opens up/vertex
ON the x-axis/1 x-intercept
I (A.J. Mueller) got these last four slides from
Ms. Hardtkes Power Point of the Quadratic
Methods.
52
Functions
53
About Functions
  • Think of f(x) like y, they are really the same
    thing.
  • The domain is the x line of the graph
  • The Range is the y line of the graph

54
Functions
  • f(x) -2x-8
  • First find the vertex.
  • ( ) The vertex of this equation is (1,-9)
  • Find the x-intercepts by setting f(x) to 0. The
    x-intercepts are -2,4
  • Find the y-intercept by setting the x in the f(x)
    to 0. You would get -8.
  • The graph the equation.

55
Simplifying expressions with exponents
  • This site will example how to simplify
    expressions with exponents very well.
  • http//www.purplemath.com/modules/simpexpo.htm

56
Radicals
  • Example 1
  • (Simplify)
  • (Now you can cancel the v2s)

57
Radicals
  • Example 2
  • (Multiply by )
  • That equals
  • Cancel out the 2s and the final answer is

58
Radicals
  • Example 3
  • Take the square root of that.
  • Final answer is

59
Word Problems
  • Example 1
  • If Tom weighs 180 on the 3th day of his diet and
    166 on the 21st day of his diet, write an
    equation you could use to predict his weight on
    any future day.
  • (day, weight)
  • (3,180)
  • 21,166)

60
Word Problems
  • Point Slope m166-180/21-31
  • That can be simplified to -14/18 and then -7/9.
  • 4-180-7/9(x-3)
  • 4-180-7/921/9
  • Answer y-7/9x182 1/3

61
Word Problems
  • Click to open the hyperlink. Then try out this
    quadratic word problem, it will walk you through
    the process of finding the answer.
  • http//www.algebra.com/algebra/homework/quadratic/
    word/02-quadratic.wpm

62
Word Problems
  • Here is another link to a word problem about time
    and travel.
  • http//www.algebra.com/algebra/homework/word/trave
    l/07-cockroach.wpm

63
Word Problems
  • This word problem is about geometry.
  • http//www.algebra.com/algebra/homework/word/geome
    try/02-rectangle.wpm
  • This site is good study tool for word problems.

64
Line of Best Fit
  • The Line of Best Fit is your guess where the
    middle of all the points are.
  • http//illuminations.nctm.org/ActivityDetail.aspx?
    id146
  • This URL is a good site to example Line of Best
    Fit. Plot your points, guess your line of best
    fit, then the computer will give the real line of
    best fit.

65
Line of Best Fit
  • Your can use a Texas Instruments TI-84 to graph
    your line of best fit and also all other types of
    graphs.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com