Solving Means Answering a Question
The question: Which value makes this equation true?
- A value that makes an equation true satisfies it
- That value is called the solution
Does
The Substitution Table in Action
The only value that satisfies
Your Turn: Solve the Second Equation
| 5 | 1 | False |
| 10 | 6 | False |
| 13 | 9 | True ✓ |
| 15 | 11 | False |
Which value satisfies
Quick Check — Vocabulary and Edge Cases
- In your own words: what does it mean to say "
satisfies "? - What would we say if no candidate made the equation true?
Think before the next slide.
Same Question — Now for Inequalities
We found one value that makes
Same question, now for an inequality:
Which values from
make true?
Inequalities Can Satisfy Multiple Values
The Boundary Value Does Not Count
Is 12 < 12? No — 12 equals 12, not less than 12.
- The symbol is
, not - Equal is not less than
does not satisfy
Solutions Exist Beyond the Candidate Set
Values outside the set can satisfy
- Try
: ✓ - Try
: ✓
The solution is all values that make
Quick Check — How Many Solutions?
From
- How many values from the set are solutions?
- Is
a solution? Why or why not? - Are there values outside the set that also satisfy
?
Answer all three before moving on.
Equations vs. Inequalities — Key Contrast
| Equation | Inequality | |
|---|---|---|
| Question | Which value makes it true? | Which values make it true? |
| Solutions | Typically one (or none) | Can be many — collect all |
| Boundary | N/A | Strict |
Key Takeaways and Warnings to Remember
✓ Solving answers: which values make this true?
✓ Equations: typically one solution from a set
✓ Inequalities: multiple values — collect all true rows
Strict
For inequalities, test every candidate — not just the first
Next Lesson Builds on This Substitution Skill
You can now test whether any value satisfies any equation or inequality.
Next (6.EE.B.7): Find solutions without testing a candidate set — using inverse operations.
Every answer you find by inverse operations can still be verified by substitution.