Monday, February 8, 2010

Dustin's Reflection

Didn't learn too much new stuff this week. I'm ready to start reading flatland being that it will help my grade. I missed the whole lesson on limits and didn't know what to do for them on the quiz. I could really use some help on them if possible. I'm just gonna help with some identification because B-rob said that alot of ppl missed those problems on the test.

Say the sequence is: 1,3,6,10,15,21,...

You can see that you are adding 2, then 3,...
Just because you are adding does not make it arithmetic though. In order for it to be arithmetic, the sequence must add or subtract the same number each time. Being that this sequence adds a different number each time, this sequence is not classified as arithmetic or geometric.

Same rules apply for geometric. If it does not multiply by the same number each time, it is not geometric. NEITHER IS ALWAYS A CHOICE.

5 comments:

  1. The limit lesson is very easy so no worries

    ill make it very easy for you so that you can understand it for the test

    there are two types of limit equations

    the ones that use rules
    and the ones that use a calculator

    the ones that use rules have simple hints to memorize for solving

    the only ones that use rules are the polynomial equations problems

    **Every polynomial limit equation will follow a rule

    memorize this

    ((the rules))
    t- top lead co
    b- bottom lead co

    t=b then coefficients
    t>b then infinity
    t<b then zero

    if you get a problem with a limit that is a polynomial equation
    use the rules.
    each and every time

    the other type of problem is the one that calls for the use of a calculator

    **every problem with limits that is not a polynommial equation calls for the use of a calculator

    all you have to do is plug in for n three different times with
    100
    1000
    10000

    then plug into calculator

    record what each outcome is

    and decipher what the numbers are headed toward which will then be your answer


    if my hints confuse you just talk to me and ill help

    ReplyDelete
  2. And when taylor says the top and bottom coefficients are equal to each other you take those two and the fraction is the answer.

    Ex:
    (7^2+3)/(2^2+5)
    take the highest coefficient from the top and bottom (7^2 & 2^2) and your answer is 7/2

    ReplyDelete
  3. To elaborate on what a limit is, It is a series of numbers that approaches something without ever reaching it. Limits can approach 0, infinity, 1, 1/2 or any number. Also, beware of rounding when plugging into your calculator! Most calculators will only float 10-20 decimal places and will begin rounding as you plug bigger numbers into the limit.

    ReplyDelete
  4. The limit approaches the number but never reaches it and there are a few rules when dealing with limits:
    1. if the degree of the top number=degree of the bottom number then the answer is the coefficients
    2. if the degree of the top is > the degree of the bottom then it = infinity
    3. if the degree of the top is < the degree of the bottom then it = 0

    ReplyDelete
  5. if the place number isnt asked for then that probably isnt what you are looking for

    review what each variable represents

    tn= an actual number
    n= the "address" of a number

    dont get that confused

    so if a problem doesnt specify an "n" essentially you are looking for a simple formula to figure out what the Tn would be for a specific address of a series

    basically youre using the formuala you have memorized to make up a formula to find the tn for any address of that specific equation

    ReplyDelete