PATTERNS. There are 4 types of patterns : 1. Geometric 2. Linear 3. n th term 4. Quadratic

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PATTERNS

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

Lets begin with Linear patterns. They are probably the easiest to recognize because the change is related to slope of a line.

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

EXAMPLE #1 : What pattern is shown in the graph ?

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

EXAMPLE #1 : What pattern is shown in the graph ?

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

EXAMPLE #1 : What pattern is shown in the graph ?

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

EXAMPLE #1 : What pattern is shown in the graph ?

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

Geometric patterns can be represented numerically and generalized algebraically.

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

Geometric patterns can be represented numerically and generalized algebraically.

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

Let’s create a table to see the relationship between each build and the number of blocks…

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

Let’s create a table to see the relationship between each build and the number of blocks…Build # Descriptio

nProcess # of

blocks

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

Let’s create a table to see the relationship between each build and the number of blocks…Build # Descriptio

nProcess # of

blocks

1 1 row of 2 plus 1

1(2)+1 3

Build #1

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

Let’s create a table to see the relationship between each build and the number of blocks…Build # Descriptio

nProcess # of

blocks

1 1 row of 2 plus 1

1(2)+1 3

2 2 rows of 2 plus 1 2(2)+1 5

Build #1

Build #2

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

Let’s create a table to see the relationship between each build and the number of blocks…Build # Descriptio

nProcess # of

blocks

1 1 row of 2 plus 1

1(2)+1 3

2 2 rows of 2 plus 1 2(2)+1 5

3 3 rows of 2 plus 1 3(2)+1 7

Build #1

Build #2

Build #3

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

Let’s create a table to see the relationship between each build and the number of blocks…Build # Descriptio

nProcess # of

blocks

1 1 row of 2 plus 1

1(2)+1 3

2 2 rows of 2 plus 1 2(2)+1 5

3 3 rows of 2 plus 1 3(2)+1 7

Build #1

Build #2

Build #3

The number changing in each build is the number of rows of two.

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

Let’s create a table to see the relationship between each build and the number of blocks…Build # Descriptio

nProcess # of

blocks

1 1 row of 2 plus 1

1(2)+1 3

2 2 rows of 2 plus 1 2(2)+1 5

3 3 rows of 2 plus 1 3(2)+1 7

Build #1

Build #2

Build #3

PATTERNS

There are 4 types of patterns :1. Geometric2. Linear3. nth term4. Quadratic

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

1st Find the difference for each consecutive term

14 – (-1) = 15 39 – 14 = 25 74 – 39 = 35119 – 74 = 45

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

Since the differences are NOT CONSTANT, we need to find the difference between the differences we just found…

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

EXAMPLE #3 : What is the tenth term of the pattern below ?

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

EXAMPLE #3 : What is the tenth term of the pattern below ?

The difference is constant, so a linear pattern.

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

EXAMPLE #3 : What is the tenth term of the pattern below ?

The difference is constant, so a linear pattern.

The pattern is decreasing so coefficient will be negative.

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

EXAMPLE #3 : What is the tenth term of the pattern below ?

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

EXAMPLE #3 : What is the tenth term of the pattern below ?

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

EXAMPLE #3 : What is the tenth term of the pattern below ?

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

EXAMPLE #4 : Write the first five terms of the pattern from the given expression below.

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

EXAMPLE #4 : Write the first five terms of the pattern from the given expression below.

Just start plugging in values for “n” starting with 1…

Nth term Patterns- look at the difference between the terms- if the differences are constant, the expression is linear- if the differences are not constant, look at the differences

between the differences- if the second differences are constant, then the expression

will be a quadratic expression

EXAMPLE #4 : Write the first five terms of the pattern from the given expression below.

Just start plugging in values for “n” starting with 1…

EXAMPLE #5 : What function does the pattern below represent ?

EXAMPLE #5 : What function does the pattern below represent ?

First differences are not constant…

EXAMPLE #5 : What function does the pattern below represent ?

EXAMPLE #5 : What function does the pattern below represent ?

EXAMPLE #5 : What function does the pattern below represent ?

EXAMPLE #5 : What function does the pattern below represent ?

EXAMPLE #5 : What function does the pattern below represent ?

EXAMPLE #5 : What function does the pattern below represent ?

EXAMPLE #5 : What function does the pattern below represent ?

EXAMPLE #5 : What function does the pattern below represent ?

EXAMPLE #5 : What function does the pattern below represent ?

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