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For each family, let be the amount of time, in hours, each family spends riding rides, and be the amount of time, in hours, each family spends at the Splash Zone.
List one or more ordered pairs that would fit the constraints. If you can list only one, explain why you can list only one.
The goal of this discussion is for students to explain how they know that a particular constraint, such as the amount of time a family wants to spend at the amusement park, is best represented by an equation or inequality, and how they know. This supports students as they further connect real-life situations to symbolic and graphical representations of inequalities.
Select students to share their responses. Ask students to describe any equations or inequalities that could be used to represent the constraints.
Focus the discussion on which constraints were represented with inequalities, how students came up with the inequalities, and how students used graphs or reasoning to find ordered pairs that satisfied multiple constraints at once. Here are some questions for discussion:
It is important for students to leave this discussion feeling confident in recognizing a constraint in a given situation and how to represent that constraint with mathematical symbols.
The purpose of the discussion is for students to recognize that regions in the plane can be described by several inequalities and points in that region will make both inequalities true.
If time permits, select another region for students to describe by modifying the equations into inequalities.
Here are some questions for discussion: