It is good experience for learners to realise that they have to
be cleverer than the computer and they cannot blindly accept
what it reveals at 'face value'. When people make conjectures
about situations and test their ideas on a computer they still
have to consider whether the computer evidence is reliable.
The problem reinforces everything already learnt about straight lines
and also highlights the interplay of algebra and geometry.
The examples with factors
and
merely require
finding the real solutions of the equations
and
and interpreting these as points on the graphs.
Experience with these two parts should suggest that
in the final relation it is necessary to factorise the equation of the relation.
Possible approach
The Hint should be sufficient to enable learners to tackle the
first 5 equations independently, which can be done for homework
or as a lesson starter.
The class will then be thinking along the right lines when they
tackle the final equation. Class discussion can heighten
awareness that the graphs of relations can have several
branches and that we need to use algebra to find all the
solutions as the computer does not necessarily show all
possibilities. Learners should also be aware that there may be
branches that are not shown on the scale used so they might
find other branches by changing the scale on the axes
Key questions
- What is a linear equation?
- Should we expect the graph of a relation to be a straight
line if the equation is not 'linear'?
- Why would the computer fail to show all the points of the
graph?
- How do we use the factors of an algebraic expression to
find out when it takes the value zero?
Possible extension
Plot these graphs on a graphical calculator or computer
graphics package. Can you think of a single relation which
would produce the graph shown in the question? Can you think of
a relation which would only show differences to those on the
screen when the scales of the graphs are magnified greatly? How
might a computer cleverly be programmed to try to spot more
branches of a relation?
Possible support
Have pupils try to plot the linear
graphs themselves. Then ask how their plotting process would need
to vary in the more complicated examples. This would point more
clearly to the fact the we need to look at solutions of the
second factors as well as the first factors.