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Episode 3 Supports

  • Episode Description

    Repeating Your Reasoning: Sasha and Keoni use their equation x = √(4y) (which they call the “short-cut way”) to find the y-value of 3 points: when the x-value is 5, 10 and 437.

  • Focus Questions

    For use in a classroom, pause the video and ask these questions:

     

    1. [Pause video at 1:03]. Without using a calculator, how can you determine the value of 25/4?

     

    2. [Pause video at 1:50]. Sasha just wrote that y = 25. What information does that give you about the parabola?

     

  • Supporting Dialogue

     

    • Invite a reluctant or shy student to suggest an x-value on the parabola (just like Keoni suggested x = 437). This is an accessible entry point for students who find contributing to class discussion challenging. Then ask the class to find the y-value for that point by using the equation x = √(4y).

    • Create an opportunity for productive disagreement by asking students if there is an x-value for which there will be no y-value on the parabola. Some students may think the parabola “ends” at about x = 8.5; others may not conceive of x-values other than whole numbers; and some may understand that there are infinitely many points on the parabola and that x can be any number.

  • Math Extensions

    1. What is the y–value of the point on the parabola with the x-value of –7.1?

     

    2. What is the y–value of the point on the parabola with the x-value of √11?

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Mathematics in this Lesson

Lesson Description

Targeted Understanding

CC Math Standards

CC Math Practices

Lesson Description

 

Sasha and Keoni use the definition of a parabola, the Pythagorean theorem, and their methods from previous lessons to represent the y-value for any point on a particular parabola, given the x-value of that point.  In contrast to Lesson 3 in which y-values were given, in this episode x-values will be given.

Targeted Understandings

 

This lesson can help students:

 

  • Interpret the algebraic expressions that are substituted into the Pythagorean theorem  (namely, y – 1, y + 1, and x), during the process of deriving an equation for a particular parabola, as distances on a coordinate grid.

  • Conceive of algebraic expressions, such as y – 1, as both a single entity and as a process of subtracting 1 from a number.

Common Core Math Standards

CCSS.M.HSF.IF.C.8: Write a function defined by an expression in different but equivalent forms to reveal and explain different properties of the function.

Keoni and Sasha re-express the equation for a given parabola that they derived in Lesson 3 (namely, x = √(4y)) as y = x2/4. They discuss how the first form of the equation is easier to use when one is given a y-value and needs to determine the corresponding x-value, while the second form is easier to use when one is given an x-value. However, they recognize that the two forms are equivalent and that either can be used to solve both problems.

 

CCSS.M.HSG.GPE.A.2. Define appropriate quantities for the purpose of descriptive modeling.

Sasha and Keoni use the geometric definition of a parabola, along with the Pythagorean theorem to derive the equation of a given parabola (namely, y = x2/4).

 

CCSS.M.HSN.Q.A.2: Define appropriate quantities for the purpose of descriptive modeling.

As they work to derive the equation of a given parabola using the Pythagorean Theorem, Sasha and Keoni define three quantities that represent the lengths of the sides of a right triangle. Because they are using a general point (x,y) on the parabola (rather than a specific point), these distances are algebraic expressions: y–1, y+1, and x.

Common Core Math Practices

 

CCSS.Math.Practice.MP8. Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning.

In this lesson, re-expressing the equation for a particular parabola, x = √(4y), as y = x2/4x, is not addressed simply as the application of algebraic manipulation skills. Rather, the process of re-expression illustrates the math practice of looking for and expressing regularity in repeated reasoning. In Episode 3, Sasha and Keoni use the equation x = √(4y) (which they derived in Lesson 3), to find the y-value for a point on the parabola when x = 5. They then repeat their reasoning for x = 10 and x = 437. By paying attention to the algebraic transformations they perform each time to isolate and solve for the y-value, they notice regularities which help them generalize their approach to solve x = √(4y)  for y in Episode 4. Approaching the act of re-expression as the generalization of repeated reasoning carries the benefit of reinforcing the equivalence of different forms of an equation and can help students deal with an abstract situation with more meaning.