STANDARD 11 - PATTERNS, RELATIONSHIPS, AND FUNCTIONS
All students will develop an understanding of patterns,
relationships, and functions and will use them to represent and
explain real-world phenomena.
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Standard 11 - Patterns, Relationships, and Functions - Grades 9-12
Overview
Patterns, relationships, and functions continue to provide a
unifying theme for the study of mathematics in high school.
Pattern-based thinking throughout the earlier grades, as described in
the K-12 Overview, and the informal investigations begun in the middle
grades have prepared students to make extensive use of both the
concept of a function and functional notation. Students should
describe the relationships found in concrete situations with algebraic
expressions, formulas and equations, as well as with tables of
input-output values, with graphs, and with written statements.
Students in high school construct, recognize, and extend
patterns as they encounter new areas of the mathematics
curriculum. For example, students in algebra recognize patterns when
multiplying binomials, and students in geometry utilize patterns in
similar triangles. Students in high school should also analyze a
variety of different types of sequences, including both arithmetic and
geometric sequences, and express their behavior using functional
notation.
High school students continue to categorize and classify
objects, especially in the context of learning new mathematics. For
example, in studying geometry, they classify various lines and line
segments as chords or secants or tangents to a given circle. In
studying algebra, they distinguish linear relationships from
non-linear relationships.
The function concept is one of the most fundamental unifying
ideas of modern mathematics. Students begin their study of functions
in the primary grades, as they observe and study patterns in nature
and create patterns using concrete models. As students grow and their
ability to abstract matures, students investigate patterns using
concrete models, and then abstract them to form rules, display
information in a table or chart, and write equations which express the
relationships they have observed. In high school, students move to
expand their knowledge of functions as a natural outcome of the
earlier discussion of patterns and relationships. Concepts such as
domain and range are formalized and the f(x) notation is
introduced as a natural extension of initial informal experiences.
Students frequently have difficulty with the concept of a function,
possibly because of its many interpretations. The formal
ordered-pair definition of a function, while perhaps the most
familiar to many teachers, is also the least understood and possibly
the most abstract way of approaching functions (Wagner and Parker,
1993). Looking at functions as correspondences between two
sets seems to be more easily grasped while facilitating the
introduction of the concepts of domain and range. Visualizing
functions as graphs which satisfy the vertical line test
provides an extremely accessible way of representing functions,
especially when graphing calculators and computers are used. Students
entering high school should already be familiar with functions as
input-output processes through the use of function machines.
They should also have encountered functions given by rules or
formulas involving independent and dependent variables. Students
moving on to calculus also need to view functions as objects of
study in themselves.
The correspondence between all of these interpretations of the
concept of a function may not be very clear to students, and so
attention should be drawn explicitly to the different ways of
understanding functions, and how together they provide a more complete
understanding of the concept. For example, while discussing
sequences, students should explore how they can be considered as
functions using the
correspondence model, the rule model, the input-output model, the
graph model, and the ordered pairs model.
High school students should spend considerable time in analyzing
relationships involving two variables,
and should understand how dependent and independent variables are
used. Beginning with concrete situations (possibly involving social
studies or science concepts), students should collect and graph data
(often using graphing calculators or computers), discover the
relationship between the two variables, and express this relationship
symbolically. Students need to have experiences with situations
involving linear, quadratic, polynomial, trigonometric, exponential,
and rational functions as well as piecewise-defined functions and
relationships that are not functions at all.
High school students should use functions extensively in solving
problems. They should frequently be asked to analyze a real-world
situation by using patterns and functions. They should extend their
understanding of relationships involving two variables to using
functions with several dependent variables in mathematical
modeling.
Throughout high school, students continue to work with patterns by
collecting and organizing data in tables, by graphing the
relationships among variables, and by discovering and describing these
relationships in formal, written, and symbolic form.
Reference
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Wagner, S., and S. Parker. "Advancing Algebra" in
Research Ideas for the
Classroom: High School
Mathematics, P. Wilson, Ed. New York: Macmillan
Publishing Company, 1993.
Standard 11 - Patterns, Relationships, and Functions - Grades 9-12
Indicators and Activities
The cumulative progress indicators for grade 12 appear below in
boldface type. Each indicator is followed by activities which
illustrate how it can be addressed in the classroom in grades 9, 10,
11, and 12.
Building upon knowledge and skills gained in the preceding grades,
experiences in grades 9-12 will be such that all students:
14. Analyze and describe how a change in the
independent variable can produce a change in a dependent
variable.
- Students investigate the relationship between stopping
distance and speed of travel in a car. The students gather data from
the driver's education manual, graph the values they have found,
note that the relationship is linear, and look for an equation that
fits the data.
- Students investigate the effect on the perimeters of given
shapes if each side is doubled or tripled. They summarize their
findings in writing and symbolically.
- Students investigate how the area of a parallelogram
changes as the length of the base is doubled, or the height is
doubled, or both are doubled. They repeat the experiment for tripling
and quadrupling each measurement. They discuss their findings and
represent them symbolically.
- Students compare two fare structures for taxis: one in
which the taxi charges $2.75 for the first 1/4 mile and $.50 for each
additional 1/4 mile, and one in which $4.25 is charged for the first
1/4 mile and $.20 for each additional 1/8 mile. They develop tables,
graph specific points, and generate equations to describe each
situation. They find which trips cost more for each fare structure
and when both will result in the same cost.
- Students investigate patterns of growth, such as
compound interest or bacterial growth, with a calculator. They make a
table showing how much money is in a savings account (if none is
withdrawn) after one quarter, two quarters, and so on, for ten years.
They represent their findings graphically, note that this is not a
linear relationship (although simple interest is linear), and write an
equation describing the relationship between the amount P
deposited initially, the interest rate r, the number n
of times that interest is paid each year, the number of years
y, and the total T available at the end of that time
period: T = (1 +
r/n)ny(P).
15. Use polynomial, rational, trigonometric, and
exponential functions to model real world phenomena.
- Students model population growth and decline of people,
animals, bacteria and decay of radioactive materials, using the
appropriate exponential functions.
- Students use a sound probe and a graphing calculator or
computer to collect data on sound waves or voice patterns, and graph
these data noting that these patterns are represented by trigonometric
functions. They use a light probe to collect data on the relationship
between the brightness of the light and its distance from the light
source, and analyze the graphprovided by the calculator.
- Students use M&Ms to model decay. They spill a package
of M&Ms on a paper plate and remove those with the M showing,
recording the number of M&Ms removed. They put the remaining
M&Ms in a cup, shake, and repeat the process until all of the
M&Ms are gone. They plot the trial number versus the number of
M&Ms remaining and note that the graph represents an exponential
function. They try different equations until they find one that they
think fits the data pretty well. They verify their results using a
graphing calculator.
- Students work on this HSPT-like problem from the
New Jersey Department of Education's Mathematics Instructional
Guide: The Granda Theater has a special rate for groups
of 10 or more people: $40 for the first 10 people and $3 for each
additional person. Which of the following expressions tells
the amount that a group of 10 or more will have to pay if n
represents the number of people in the group, where n is at least 10:
a. 40 + 3n,
b. (40 + 3)n,
c. 40 + 3(n + 10), or d. 40 + 3(n - 10)?
- Students learn about the Richter Scale for measuring
earthquakes and about the pH measurement of a solution, noting how
exponents are built into these measurements. For example, a pH of 4
is 10 times more acidic than a pH of 5 and 100 times more acidic than
a pH of 6.
- Students work in groups to investigate what size square to
cut from each corner of a rectangular piece of cardboard in order to
make the largest possible open-top box. They make models, record the
size of the square and the volume for each model, and plot the points
on a graph. They note that the relationship is not linear and make a
conjecture about the maximum volume, based on the graph. The students
also generate a symbolic expression describing this situation and
check to see if it matches their data by using a graphing
calculator.
16. Recognize that a variety of phenomena can be
modeled by the same type of function.
- Different groups of students work on problems with
different settings but identical structures. For example, one group
determines the number of collisions possible between two, three and
four bumper cars at an amusement park and develops an equation to
represent the number of possible collisions among n bumper cars
(assuming that no two bumper cars collide more than once). Another
group investigates the number of possible handshakes between 2, 3, and
4 people, and develops an equation to represent the number of
handshakes for n people. A third group discusses the total
number of sides and diagonals possible in a triangle, a quadrilateral,
and a pentagon, and develops an equation that gives the total number
of sides and diagonals for an n-sided polygon. A fourth group
looks at the number of games required for a tournament if each team
plays every other team only once, while a fifth considers connecting
telephone lines to houses. Each group presents its problem, its
approach to solving the problem, and its solution. Then the teacher
leads the class in a discussion of the similarities and differences
among the problems. Students note the similarities between the
approaches used by the different groups and that they all came up with
the general expression n(n1)/2.
- Students investigate a number of situations involving the
equation y = 2x. They look at how much money would be
earned by starting out with a penny on the first day anddoubling the
amount on each successive day. They discuss what happens if they
start with two bacteria and the number of bacteria doubles every half
hour. They consider the total number of pizzas possible as more and
more toppings are added. They consider the number of subsets for a
given set. They fold a sheet of paper repeatedly in half and look at
how many sections are created after each fold.
- Students look for connections among problem situations
involving temperature in Celsius and Fahrenheit, the relationship of
the circumference of a circle to its diameter, the relationship
between stopping distance and car speed, between money earned and
hours worked, between distance and time if the rate is kept constant,
and between profit and price per ticket.
17. Analyze and explain the general properties and
behavior of functions, and use appropriate graphing
technologies to represent them.
- As regular parts of their assessments, students make up
graphs to represent specific problem situations, such as the cost of
pencils that sell at two for a dime, the temperature of an oven as a
function of the length of time since it was turned on, their height
from the ground as they ride a ferris wheel as a function of the
amount of time since they got on, the time it takes to travel 100
miles as a function of average speed, or the cost of mailing a
first-class letter based on its weight in ounces.
- Students use a string of constant length, say 30 inches,
and list all possible lengths and widths of rectangles with integral
sides which have this perimeter. They determine the perimeter and
area for each rectangle. Then they make three graphs from their data:
length vs. width, length vs. perimeter, and length vs. area. They
look for equations to describe each graph, determine an appropriate
range of values for each variable, and then graph the functions using
graphing calculators or computers. The rectangle of maximum area, a
square, does not have integral values, but can be found using the
trace function or algebraic procedures. Students also investigate the
area of a circle made with the same string and compare it to the areas
of the rectangles.
- Students take on the role of "forensic
mathematicians," trying to determine the height of a person whose
femur was 17 inches long. They measure their own femurs and their
heights, entering the class data into a graphing calculator or
computer and creating a scatterplot. They note that the data are
approximately linear, so they use the built-in linear regression
procedures to find the line of best fit and then make their
prediction.
18. Analyze the effects of changes in parameters on
the graphs of functions.
- Students investigate the characteristics of linear
functions. For example, in y = kx, how does a change in
k affect the graph? In y = mx + b, what is the role of
b? Does k in the first equation serve the same purpose
as m in the second? Students use the graphing calculator to
investigate and verify their conclusions.
- Students investigate the effects of a dilation and/or a
horizontal or vertical shift on the algebraic expression of various
types of functions. For example, how does moving a graph up 3 units
affect its equation?
- Students look at the effects of changing the coefficients
of a quadratic equation on its graph. For example, how is the graph
of y = 4x2 different from that of
y = x2? How is
y = .2x2 different from y
= x2? How are y =
x2 + 4, y = x2
- 4, y = x2 - 4x, and
y = x2 - 4x + 4 each
different from y = x2? How is y = sin
4x different from
y = 4 sin x? Students use graphing calculators
to look at the graphs and summarize their conjectures in
writing.
- Students study the behavior of functions of the form y
= axn. They investigate the effect of a
on the curve and the characteristics of the graph when n is
even or odd. They use the graphing calculator to assist them and
write a sentence summarizing their discoveries.
19. Understand the role of functions as a unifying
concept in mathematics
- Students in all mathematics classes use functions, making
explicit connections to what they have previously learned about
functions. As students encounter a new use or meaning for functions,
they relate it to their previous understandings.
- Students use recursive definitions of functions in both
geometry and algebra. For example, they define n! recursively
as n! = n×(n-1)! They use recursion to
generate fractals in studying geometry. They may use patterns such as
spirolaterals, the Koch snowflake, the Monkey's Tree curve, the
Chaos Game, or the Sierpinski triangle. They may use Logo or other
software to iterate patterns, or they may use the graphing calculator.
In studying algebra, students consider the equation y =
.1x + .6, starting with an x-value of .6, and find the
resulting yvalue. Using this yvalue as the new xvalue,
they then calculate its corresponding yvalue, and so on. (The
resulting values are .6, .66, .666, .6666, ... - providing
closer and closer approximations to the decimal value of 2/3!)
Students investigate the results of iterations which are other
starting values for the same function; the results are surprising!
They use other equations and repeat the procedure. They graph the
results with a graphing calculator, adjusting the range values to
permit viewing the resulting y-values. (See Fractals for
the Classroom by H.-O. Peitgen, et al.)
References
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Peitgen, Heinz-Otto, et al. Fractals for the Classroom:
Strategic Activities, Volume One and
Two. Reston, VA: NCTM and New York: Springer- Verlag,
1992.
Wagner, S. and S. Parker. "Advancing Algebra" in
Researching Ideas for the
Classroom: High School Mathematics,
P. Wilson, Ed. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1993.
On-Line Resources
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http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/archive/nj_math_coalition/framework.html/
The Framework will be available at this site during
Spring 1997. In time, we hope to post additional resources
relating to this standard, such as grade-nnspecific activities submitted
by New Jersey teachers, and to provide a forum to discuss the
Mathematics Standards.
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