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The purpose of this Warm-up is to remind students that two different numbers can have the same square. This is an example of two inputs having the same output for a given rule—in this case, the rule is “Square the number.” Later activities in the lesson explore rules that have multiple outputs for the same input.
Give students 1–2 minutes of quiet work time, and follow with a whole-class discussion.
Here are some numbers in a list:
The focus of this discussion should be on the final question, which, even though the language isn't used in the problem, helps prepare students for thinking about the collection of values that make up the inputs and outputs for given rules. Here, the input is a list of 7 unique values, while the output has only 5 unique values.
Invite students to share their responses to the second problem, and display this new list of numbers along with the original list for all to see. Next, invite different students to share their explanations from the forth problem. Emphasize the idea that when we square a negative number, we get a positive number. This means two different numbers can have the same square, or using the language of inputs and outputs, two different inputs can have the same output for a rule.
If time allows, ask, “Can you think of other rules where different inputs can have the same output?” After 30 seconds of quiet think time, select students to share their rules. They may recall the previous lesson where they encountered the rule “Write 7,” which has only 1 output for all inputs, and the rule “Name the digit in the tenths place,” which has only 10 unique outputs for all inputs.
Understand that a function is a rule that assigns to each input exactly one output. The graph of a function is the set of ordered pairs consisting of an input and the corresponding output. Function notation is not required in Grade 8.
In this activity students are presented with a series of questions similar to “A table is 60 inches wide. Do you know its width in feet?” For some of the questions, the answer is yes (because we can convert from inches to feet by dividing by 12). In other cases, the answer is no (for example, “A person is 14 years old. Do you know their height?”). The purpose is to develop students’ understanding of the structure of a function as something that has one and only one output for each allowable input. In cases where the answer is yes, students draw an input-output diagram with the rule in the box. In cases where the answer is no, they give examples of an input with two or more outputs. In the Activity Synthesis, the word “function” is introduced to students for the first time.
Display the example statement (but not the input-output diagram) for all to see.
Example: A table is 60 inches wide. Do you know its width in feet?
Give students 30 seconds of quiet think time, and ask them to be prepared to justify their response. Select students to share their answers, recording and displaying different justifications for all to see.
Display the following input-output diagrams for all to see. Ask students if the rules in the diagrams match the justifications they just heard:
Tell students that they will draw input-output diagrams like these as part of the task. Answer any questions students might have about the input-output diagrams. Be sure students understand that if they answer yes to the question, they will need to draw the input-output diagram, and if they answer no, they need to give an example of why the question does not have one answer.
Give students 8–10 minutes of quiet work time for the problems, and follow with a whole-class discussion.
Use Collect and Display to create a shared reference that captures students’ developing mathematical language. Collect the language that students use to decide if the answer to the question is yes or no. Display words and phrases, such as “There is more than one possible output,” “If the input is a number, the output is one-fifth times that number,” and “This rule works for any input but zero since we cannot divide by zero.”
Say yes or no for each question. If yes, draw an input-output diagram. If no, give examples of two different outputs that are possible for the same input.
The square of a number is 16. Do you know the number?
A square has a perimeter of 12 cm. Do you know its area?
A rectangle has an area of 16 cm2. Do you know its length?
You are given a number. Do you know the number that is as big?
The goal of this discussion is for students to understand that functions are rules that have one distinct output for each input.
Direct students’ attention to the reference created using Collect and Display. Ask previously selected students to share the rules they identified for questions they answered yes to. Invite students to borrow language from the display as needed. As they respond, update the reference to include additional phrases. For example, the display may already have a rule for finding the area of the square from its perimeter as “Find the side length, then square it,” and next to it can be added “Divide by four, then square it.” For the final two problems where the input is not a specific value, if no student used a letter to stand in for the input, invite them to consider how to do so now, and record their thinking on the display. For example, next to “ of a number” could go “.”
Tell students that each time they answered one of the questions with a yes, the sentence defined a function, and that one way to represent a function is by writing a rule to define the relationship between the input and the output. Functions are special types of rules where each input has only one possible output. Functions are useful since once we know an input, we can find the single output that goes with it. Contrast this with something like a rolling a number cube where the input “roll” has many possible outputs. For the questions students responded to with no, these are not functions because there is no single output for each input.
To highlight how rules that are not functions do not determine outputs in a unique way, end the discussion by asking:
Understand that a function is a rule that assigns to each input exactly one output. The graph of a function is the set of ordered pairs consisting of an input and the corresponding output. Function notation is not required in Grade 8.
In this activity students revisit the questions in the previous activity and start using the language of functions to describe the way one quantity depends on another. For the “yes” questions, students write a statement like “[The output] depends on [the input]” or “[The output] is a function of [the input].” For the “no” questions, they write a statement like “[The output] does not depend on [the input].” Students will use this more precise language throughout the rest of the unit and course when describing functions (MP6).
Depending on the time available and students’ needs, only a subset of the questions, such as just the odds, may be assigned.
Display the example statement from the previous activity ("A table is 60 inches wide. Do you know its width in feet?") for all to see. Tell students that since the answer to this question is yes, we can write a statement like “The width in feet depends on the width in inches” or “The width in feet is a function of the width in inches.”
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give students 5–8 minutes of quiet work time and then additional time to share their responses with their partner. If they have a different response than their partner, encourage them to explain their reasoning and try to reach agreement. Follow with a whole-class discussion.
Here are the questions from the previous activity.
For the ones you said yes to, write a statement like “The height a rubber ball bounces to depends on the height it was dropped from” or “Bounce height is a function of drop height.”
For all of the ones you said no to, write a statement like “The day of the week does not determine the temperature that day” or “The temperature that day is not a function of the day of the week.”
The goal of this discussion is for students to use the language like “[The output] depends on [the input]” and “[The output] is a function of [the input]” while recognizing that a “function” means each input gives exactly one output.
Begin the discussion by asking students if any of them had a different response from their partner that they were not able to reach agreement on. If any groups say yes, ask both partners to share their responses. Next, select groups to briefly share their responses for the other questions, and address any questions. For example, students may have a correct answer but be unsure since they used different wording than the person who shared their answer verbally with the class.
If time permits, give groups 1–2 minutes to invent a new question like the ones in the task that is not a function. Select 2–3 groups to share their question, and ask a different group to explain why it is not a function using language like “[The input] does not determine [the output] because . . . .”
Optional
Understand that a function is a rule that assigns to each input exactly one output. The graph of a function is the set of ordered pairs consisting of an input and the corresponding output. Function notation is not required in Grade 8.
The activity calls back to a previous lesson in which students filled out tables of values from input-output diagrams. Here, students determine if a rule is describing the same function but with different words, giving them an opportunity to look for and make use of the structure of a function (MP7).
Students are given three different input-output diagrams and need to determine which rules could describe the same function. A key point in this activity is that context plays an important role. For example, if the first rule is limited to positive inputs and the second rule is about sides of squares (which also has only positive inputs), then the two input-output rules describe the same function.
Give students 1–2 minutes of quiet work time, and follow with a whole-class discussion.
Which input-output rules could describe the same function (if any)? Be prepared to explain your reasoning.
The goal of this discussion is for students to explain how two different rules can describe the same function and that two functions are the same if and only if all of their input-output pairs are the same.
Consider asking some of the following questions:
The purpose of this lesson was to define functions as rules that assign exactly one output to each allowable input. We say things like “the output is a function of the input” and “the output depends on the input” when talking about the relationship between inputs and outputs of functions.
To highlight the language and definition of functions from the lesson, ask:
Let’s say we have an input-output rule that gives exactly one output for each allowable input. Then we say the output depends on the input, or the output is a function of the input.
For example, the area of a square is a function of the side length because the area can be found from the side length by squaring it. So when the input is 10 cm, the output is 100 cm2.
Sometimes we might have two different rules that describe the same function. As long as we always get the same single output from any given input, the rules describe the same function.
Understand that a function is a rule that assigns to each input exactly one output. The graph of a function is the set of ordered pairs consisting of an input and the corresponding output. Function notation is not required in Grade 8.