Sign in to view assessments and invite other educators
Sign in using your existing Kendall Hunt account. If you don’t have one, create an educator account.
Provide access to devices that can run Desmos or other graphing technology. Consider arranging students in groups of 2. For the first question, ask one partner to operate the graphing technology and the other to record the group’s observations, and then to switch roles halfway. If using Desmos, instruct students that creating a slider to experiment with linear terms might be a useful tool in this activity.
| equation | -intercepts | -coordinate of vertex |
|---|---|---|
Invite students to share their observations and predictions.
To help students make sense of the shifts in -intercepts, relate the expressions in standard form to equivalent expressions in factored form. Remind students that the factored form allows us to see the zeros of a quadratic function and the -intercepts of the graph representing the function. Writing the expression as lets us see that the zeros are 0 and 20 (because and both give an output of 0), and the -intercepts are and . Likewise, can be written as , so the -intercepts of and make sense.
Discuss with students:
Tell students they will continue to make sense of quadratic equations and their graphs in the rest of this unit and in an upcoming unit.
Time permitting, consider asking students to predict how the graph of would change if we add both a linear term and a constant term, for example, adding and then . “How would the the graph of differ from that of ?” Students are likely to say that the graph would have a -intercept of , but the -intercepts are now harder to determine. Tell students that they will learn how to find the zeros and the -intercepts of the graph representing such functions in a later unit.
Use graphing technology to graph a function that matches each given graph. Make sure that your graph goes through all 3 points shown!
A
Equation:
B
Equation:
C
Equation:
D
Equation:
E
Equation:
F
Equation:
G
Equation:
H
Equation:
I
Equation:
J
Equation:
Select students to share their strategies for writing equations. Highlight explanations such as:
Consider discussing Graph F, as it is unlike most graphs that students have seen so far (it has only one -intercept at and one -intercept that is not at the origin). Here a couple of approaches: