Linear Connection: Proof Reveals Slope
From the proof:
Slope
Example: Reading Slope from the Proof Formula
Rate of change:
The slope is 6 — which we could read directly from the formula, but the proof tells us WHY it's constant.
Exponential Connection: Proof Reveals Base
From the proof:
: ratio = (the base itself) : ratio = : ratio =
Base = ratio per unit; for interval
Example: Growth Factors at Different Interval Widths
: factor = (6% growth) : factor = (33.8% growth) : factor = (79.1% growth)
Quick Check: Compute a Growth Factor
What is the growth factor over 20 years?
Use the proof formula. Think before the next slide.
Using Proofs to Classify: The Strategy
Linear:
Exponential:
Both fail: neither linear nor exponential.
Example: Classify a Quadratic Function Algebraically
Difference:
Ratio:
Conclusion: quadratic — neither type.
Example: Testing a Shifted Exponential
Ratio test:
This depends on
Only pure
Quick Check: Is This Exponential?
Apply the ratio test: compute
Does the result depend on
Think before the next slide.
Summary: Classifying Four Functions Side by Side
| Function | Diff. test | Ratio test | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| = 2 | — | Linear | |
| depends on |
depends on |
Neither | |
| = −3 | — | Linear | |
| depends on |
= 0.5 | Exponential |
Guided Practice: Classify a Function
Difference test:
This depends on
Your Turn: Classify These Three Functions
For each: apply the difference test (and ratio test if needed). State the type and cite evidence.
Pause before the next slide.
Classification Practice: Answers and Evidence
-
→ Linear ✓ -
→ Exponential ✓ -
; ratio also has → Neither ✓
Key Takeaways from Lesson Two
✓ Slope =
✓ Base = ratio per unit interval (
✓ Growth factor over
Use differences for linear; ratios for exponential
Result depends on
Connecting These Proofs to Future Modeling
You've completed HSF.LE.A.1.a.
Coming up:
- HSF.LE.A.1.b: Recognize constant-rate situations
- HSF.LE.A.1.c: Recognize constant percent-rate situations
- HSF.LE.A.2: Construct models from data
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Prove growth properties of functions