Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

There has been a fire! 3 fire engines are called to a fire. Every time 3 fire engines are called to a fire, 4 police cars follow. Whenever 4 police cars.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "There has been a fire! 3 fire engines are called to a fire. Every time 3 fire engines are called to a fire, 4 police cars follow. Whenever 4 police cars."— Presentation transcript:

1 There has been a fire! 3 fire engines are called to a fire. Every time 3 fire engines are called to a fire, 4 police cars follow. Whenever 4 police cars follow fire engines, 4 ambulances follow them. Wherever 4 ambulances go, 4 news trucks aren’t far behind. Do you see a pattern forming?

2 #1 #2#3#4

3 We can use a recursive pattern rule to show how our pattern begins and continues: Start with 3 vehicles and add 4 each time. 3, 7, 11, 15

4 Imagine now that 4 racecars followed the news vans. Then 4 jeeps followed the racecars.

5 We could still use our recursive pattern rule to determine the number of total vehicles., 19, 23, 15 3, 7, 11

6 But what if every other car in town followed to see what all the commotion was about?—4 Chevy trucks, then 4 Honda Accords, then 4 Dodge Neons, then 4 Nissan Sentras…. And this continued until 115 different types of vehicles had arrived at the fire, right from the 3 fire trucks we started with!

7 Well, then we would need a more efficient method to find the total number of vehicles at the fire because using our recursive pattern rule would take way too long. There would be too many numbers!

8 We need something called an explicit pattern rule--a patterning shortcut that tells us the exact steps we need to take in order to extend a pattern. An explicit pattern rule can save us time, especially when we’re trying to find out the number of total vehicles at a fire when 115 different types of vehicles follow each other.

9 An explicit pattern rule can take two different forms. The first method (I’ll call the “Solve the Riddle Method”) uses a t-table. On the left side of the t- table is the number of different kinds of vehicles, and on the right side is the total number of vehicles. All we do in this method is try to find a way to relate the first column to the second column and make a rule from it. Let’s figure out a rule and use it for the 115 th term.

10 # of Types of Vehicles (Term #) # of Total Vehicles (Term) 12341234 3 7 11 15 459 X 4 - 1 115

11 Was that tricky? It takes practice, but it can be fun! The other method requires less thought. As long as you can remember the steps, it should be a piece of cake, and, better yet, it should work every time you use it! Follow the formula on the next slide.

12 3 + (115 – 1)X 4 4 is the common difference in this pattern, which means we increased our pattern by 4 with every term. 3 is the number we started our pattern with. We want to find out how many total vehicles are at the fire when 115 different kinds of vehicles are there. We subtract 1 from 115 because the pattern is increasing 114 times. We don’t want to double count our starting point.

13 3 + (115 – 1)X 4 114 = X 43 + 456 = 3 + 459 =


Download ppt "There has been a fire! 3 fire engines are called to a fire. Every time 3 fire engines are called to a fire, 4 police cars follow. Whenever 4 police cars."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google