Open Questions from Lesson 1
Two questions left unanswered:
— so must equal ? — what does that mean?
Both answers come from one simple pattern.
Dividing by the Base Reveals the Pattern
Each row divides by 2 — the pattern forces
Why Any Nonzero Base to Zero Equals One
Two arguments, same answer:
-
Pattern:
— one more step past gives -
Quotient rule:
and — so
Both arguments require
Check-In: Zero Exponent Boundary Cases
Evaluate each:
- Is
defined?
Think before you answer — especially the last one.
Pattern Continues Below Zero: Negative Exponents
The pattern continues past
The rule:
A negative exponent means "take the reciprocal" — not "make it negative."
Negative Exponent Does Not Mean Negative Result
- Negative exponent:
— the result is positive - Negative base:
— the result is negative
A negative exponent means reciprocal, not negative.
Converting Three Types of Negative Exponent Expressions
Write each with positive exponents:
Note the last one:
Check-In: Apply the Negative Exponent Rule
Write with positive exponents, then evaluate:
For problem 2: apply the product rule first, then convert.
Consistency Check: Rules Still Work
Verify that
By the product rule:
By arithmetic:
Both agree — our definitions of
All Seven Rules Ready to Chain Together
You now know all seven exponent properties:
- Product of powers 5. Power of a quotient
- Quotient of powers 6. Zero exponent
- Power of a power 7. Negative exponent
- Power of a product
The standard requires applying two or more rules in sequence.
Strategy: Identify Before You Compute
Before simplifying, ask:
- What structure? — product, quotient, power of a power?
- Which rule applies first? — name it, then execute
- Repeat — ask again after each step
Simplify inside grouping symbols first (order of operations).
The CCSS Example: Two Rules in Sequence
Simplify
Step 1 — Product of powers (same base, add exponents):
Step 2 — Negative exponent rule (convert to positive):
Two rules, two steps. Final answer:
Problem 1: Numerator First, Then Quotient
Simplify
Step 1 — Product of powers in numerator:
Step 2 — Quotient of powers:
Problem 2: Power of a Power, Then Quotient
Simplify
Step 1 — Power of a power (multiply exponents):
Step 2 — Quotient of powers (subtract exponents):
Problem 3: Two Solution Paths
Simplify
Path A:
Path B:
Both paths give
Problem 4: Fraction with Negative Exponent
Simplify
Step 1 — Negative exponent on a fraction (flip):
Step 2 — Power of a quotient:
Step 3 — Zero exponent:
Final:
Practice: Chain Rules to Simplify Expressions
Simplify each expression. Show each rule you apply.
Identify which rule applies at each step before computing.
Practice: Rule Sequences and Final Simplified Answers
-
Option A: Inside first →
Option B: Distribute →
✓ -
Summary: All Seven Exponent Rules
| Rule | Form | Key word |
|---|---|---|
| Product of powers | Add | |
| Quotient of powers | Subtract | |
| Power of a power | Multiply | |
| Power of a product | Distribute | |
| Power of a quotient | Distribute | |
| Zero exponent | One | |
| Negative exponent | Reciprocal |
Product/quotient rules require same base —
What Comes Next: Scientific Notation
All seven rules appear in scientific notation operations:
— power of a product + power of a power — product of powers
Next lesson: apply these rules to very large and very small numbers.