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Consider the function given by . This function takes an input , multiplies it by 3, then subtracts 7 to get an output .
Evaluate mentally.
Here are the values of the first 5 terms of 3 sequences:
Jada and Mai are trying to decide what type of sequence this could be:
| term number | value |
|---|---|
| 1 | 2 |
| 2 | 6 |
| 5 | 18 |
Jada says: “I think this sequence is geometric because in the value column, each row is 3 times the previous row.”
Mai says: “I don’t think it is geometric. I graphed it, and it doesn’t look geometric.”
Do you agree with Jada or Mai? Explain or show your reasoning.
Consider the sequence 2, 5, 8, . . . How would you describe how to calculate the next term from the previous term?
Each term in this sequence is 3 more than the term before it.
This is an example of an arithmetic sequence. An arithmetic sequence is a sequence in which the value of each term is the value of the previous term added to a constant. If we know the constant to add, we can use it to find other terms.
For example, each term in this sequence is 3 more than the term before it. To find this constant, sometimes called the rate of change or common difference, we can subtract consecutive terms. This can also help us decide whether a sequence is arithmetic.
For example, the sequence 3, 6, 12, 24 is not an arithmetic sequence because . But the sequence 100, 80, 60, 40 is arithmetic because the differences of consecutive terms are all the same: . This means that the rate of change is -20 for the sequence 100, 80, 60, 40.
It is important to remember that, while the last two lessons have introduced geometric and arithmetic sequences, there are many other sequences that are neither geometric nor arithmetic.
A sequence in which each term is the previous term plus a constant.