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Kiran graphed the equation and noticed that the vertex is at . He changed the equation to and saw that the graph shifted 3 units to the right and the vertex is now at .
Next, he graphed the equation and observed that the vertex is at . Kiran thought, “If I change the squared term to , the graph of will be 5 units to the right and the vertex will be at .”
Do you agree with Kiran? Explain or show your reasoning.
Select students to share their equations for the first question and their explanations for how they knew what modifications to make.
Then focus the discussion on the third question and how students knew that, when a quadratic expression is in standard form, adding a constant term before squaring the input variable does not translate the graph the same way as when the expression is in vertex form. At this point, students are not expected to come up with a rigorous justification as to why the graph will not translate as Kiran described. They are only to make this observation and consider ways to explain it.
Solicit as many explanations as time permits. If no one mentioned that the expression is not in vertex form and that its parameters do not relate to the graph the same way, bring up these points.
If time permits, consider pointing out that in the input shows up in the squared term and the linear term. If we subtract 5 from before it is squared but do not subtract 5 from before it is multiplied by 2, then the graph does not shift horizontally. (If we graph , the graph does shift 5 units to the right.) In a later course, students will look more closely at the effects on the graph of replacing by, for instance, and .
Math Community
Display the Math Community Chart. Give students a brief quiet think time to read the norms, or invite a student to read them out loud. Tell students that during this activity they are going to practice looking for their classmates putting the norms into action. At the end of the activity, students can share what norms they saw and how the norms supported the mathematical community during the activity.
Use Three Reads to support reading comprehension and sense-making about this problem. Display only the problem stem and the images, without revealing the questions.
Provide continued access to graphing technology, in case students choose to use it.
Provide access to devices that can run Desmos or other graphing technology.
Do you see 2 “eyes” and a smiling “mouth” on the graph? The 3 arcs on the graph all represent quadratic functions that were initially defined by , but whose equations were later modified.
Mai is learning to create computer animation by programming. In one part of her animation, she uses a quadratic function to model the path of the main character, an animated peanut, jumping over a wall.
Mai uses the equation to represent the path of the jump. represents the height of the peanut as a function of the horizontal distance, , that it travels.
On the screen, the base of the wall is located at , with the top of the wall at . The dashed curve in the picture shows the graph of 1 equation that Mai tried, where the peanut fails to make it over the wall.
Some students may randomly choose values for and until they find a combination whose graph meets the requirements. Encourage them to reason about the problem more systematically, by considering what they learned about the vertex form.