Example One: The Plumber Problem
"A plumber charges a $75 service fee plus $50 per hour."
- Rate: $50 per hour →
- Initial value: $75 fee →
- Function:
, = hours, = cost (dollars)
Verify and Check the Plumber Function
Verify with initial condition:
This is the service fee — the cost before any hours of work.
Check a value:
Example Two: The Draining Tank
"A 500-gallon tank drains at 8 gallons per minute."
- Rate: 8 gal/min draining →
- Initial value: 500 gal →
; domain
Negative Rates: Drops, Loses, Decreases
"Drops," "loses," "decreases," "falls," "drains" → negative slope
- "Water drops 3 in/hr" →
- "Value falls $200/month" →
- "Temperature decreases 4°/hr" →
Check: after 1 unit,
Example Three: No Initial Value
"A phone plan costs $40 per month with no activation fee."
- Rate: $40 per month →
- Initial value: no fee →
- Function:
Quick Check: Write the Function
"A parking garage charges $3 per hour with a $5 flat fee."
- Rate: $m = $ ?
- Initial value: $b = $ ?
- Write
with units. - Verify:
Try before the next slide.
Practice: Write Three Linear Functions
- Taxi: $2.50/mile + $3 boarding fee.
- Barrel: 120 liters, drains 4 L/hr.
- Gym: $25/month, no enrollment fee.
Write each function, state the domain, verify
Pause before the next slide.
Answers: Three Linear Function Problems
; = miles; ✓ ; domain ; ✓ ; = months; ✓
From Writing Models to Evaluating Them
You can now build a linear function from any constant rate description.
The next question: is the model actually reasonable?
A linear model assumes the rate is truly constant. In reality, rates often change.
Every Linear Model Is a Simplification
A constant rate model is valid when:
- The rate is physically controlled (factory output, utility billing)
- The time period is short relative to feedback effects
- The domain is limited to where the assumption holds
Ask: over what range of inputs is this model reasonable?
Candle Example: Domain Limits the Model
"A candle burns at 2 cm per hour."
- Valid for the first few hours? Likely yes.
- Valid past the candle's full length? No — the candle has a finite length.
- Domain:
Population Growth: When Linear Falls Short
"A city grows by 1,000 people per year."
- Reasonable for 5 years? Perhaps.
- Reasonable for 100 years? Likely not — growth may accelerate or stall.
A constant percent growth model may be more realistic long-term.
When Linear Models Break Down
Linear models fail when the rate is NOT truly constant:
- Feedback: rate increases as quantity grows
- Physical limits: tank can't overflow; temp can't fall below zero
- Changing conditions: speed varies with traffic or grade
Ask: is constant rate reasonable for this context?
Quick Check: Write and Evaluate a Model
"A car depreciates by $2,000 per year from an initial value of $24,000."
- Write
— include slope, intercept, variable names. - State the domain.
- Is the constant rate assumption reasonable? For how long?
Think before the next slide.
Key Takeaways from Lesson Two
✓ Rate → slope; starting value → y-intercept; write the linear function
✓ Decreasing context → negative slope
✓ Verify initial value; state the domain
Omitting the y-intercept ignores the initial value
Decreasing context → slope is NEGATIVE
Linear models assume constant rate — evaluate the domain
What Comes Next in Functions
You've completed HSF.LE.A.1.b.
Coming up:
- HSF.LE.A.1.c: Recognize constant percent rate situations
- HSF.LE.A.2: Construct linear and exponential models from data
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Recognize constant rate situations