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Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Arithmetic, Geometric, and Fibonacci

In this lesson:

  • Classify sequences as arithmetic, geometric, or neither
  • Write explicit and recursive formulas for each type
  • Compute Fibonacci terms and explain why two initial values are needed
Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

What You Will Learn Today

  1. Write explicit and recursive formulas for arithmetic sequences
  2. Write explicit and recursive formulas for geometric sequences
  3. Classify a sequence as arithmetic, geometric, or neither
  4. Compute Fibonacci terms and explain why two initial terms are needed
  5. Connect arithmetic sequences to linear functions graphically
Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Quick Review from Lesson 1

is a function with — but what type?

  • Differences: — constant → arithmetic
  • Ratios: — not constant → not geometric

Today we name and formalize both types.

Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Arithmetic Sequences — Definition and Formulas

An arithmetic sequence has a constant difference between consecutive terms.

General formulas:

  • Explicit:
  • Recursive: , for

Think: ArithmeticAdd (constant addition each step)

Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Arithmetic Example: Find Both Formulas

Explicit: , so

  • Verify: ✓,

Recursive: , for

Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Arithmetic Sequence — Recursive Build

, builds:

Theater: 20 seats in row 1, adding 2 per row.

Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Arithmetic Graph — Discrete vs. Continuous

Two graphs side by side: left shows arithmetic sequence 5,8,11,14,17 as isolated dots; right shows line y=3x+2 as continuous

  • Arithmetic sequence : isolated dots at integers
  • Linear function : continuous line
  • Both have slope — arithmetic sequences are the discrete analog of linear functions
Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Check: Classify and Write Formulas

Theater problem: Row 1 has 20 seats, each row adds 2.

  1. Is this arithmetic or geometric?
  2. Write the explicit formula $s(n) = $ ?
  3. Write the recursive definition

(Answer on the next slide)

Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Geometric Sequences — Definition and Formulas

A geometric sequence has a constant ratio between consecutive terms.

General formulas:

  • Explicit:
  • Recursive: , for

Think: GeometricGrow by multiplication

Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Geometric Example: Find Both Formulas

Sequence:

Explicit formula:

  • Ratio:
  • Verify: ✓,

Recursive formula:

  • , for
Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Real-World Geometric: Bank Account Growth

$1000 at 5% annual interest:

Balance
1 $1000
5 $1216
  • Ratio — discrete analog of exponential growth
Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Check: Classify Three Sequences by Type

Classify each as arithmetic, geometric, or neither. State or :

(Answers on the next slide)

Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Classification Drill: Identify and Write Formulas

Classify each sequence and write the explicit formula:

(Answers on the next slide)

Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Classification Drill: Answers and Formulas

  1. arithmetic, ,
  2. geometric, ,
  3. geometric, ,
  4. arithmetic, ,
Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

The Fibonacci Sequence — Two Initial Terms

The Fibonacci sequence shown as a function table and term computation: f(0)=1, f(1)=1, f(2)=2 through f(10)=89, with the recurrence relation displayed

Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Computing the First Eleven Fibonacci Terms

Definition: , , for

Each term = sum of two previous terms.

Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Why Two Initial Terms Are Required

The rule looks back two positions.

Sequence Rule looks back Initial terms needed
Arithmetic 1 position only
Fibonacci 2 positions and
Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Check: Why Two Initial Terms?

The rule with only :

  • Can you compute ? (Need unknown!)
  • Can you compute ? (Not given by the rule — undefined!)

Without both and , the Fibonacci sequence cannot begin.

Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Fibonacci Is Neither Arithmetic nor Geometric

  • Differences: — not constant
  • Ratios: — not constant

Still a function: integer domain, each input → one output. Only definition is recursive.

Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Synthesis: All Three Are Functions

Comparison table: arithmetic vs geometric vs Fibonacci — formula type, initial conditions needed, graph shape, real-world connection

  • All three are functions with integer domains
  • Arithmetic and geometric have explicit formulas; Fibonacci does not
  • The number of initial conditions matches how many steps back the rule looks
Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Synthesis: Three Mixed Practice Problems

Work independently:

1. Compute using , ,

2. Classify — write both formulas

3. A savings account has $500; you add $50 each month. Write . Is it arithmetic or geometric?

Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Synthesis Practice: Check Your Answers

1.

2. Geometric, : explicit ; recursive ,

3. Arithmetic, :

  • ✓,
Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

Key Takeaways: Three Sequence Families

  • Arithmetic: constant — discrete analog of linear functions
  • Geometric: constant — discrete analog of exponential functions
  • Fibonacci: two-term rule — requires two initial conditions

Classify: differences → arithmetic; ratios → geometric; neither → other.
Watch out: All three are functions with integer domains.

Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3
Sequences as Functions | Lesson 2 of 2

What's Next: Building Sequence Formulas

Coming up in HSF.BF.A.2:

  • Derive arithmetic and geometric formulas from context
  • Model real-world situations as sequence functions
  • Connect sequences to linear and exponential function families
Grade 9 | High School Functions | HSF.IF.A.3