Expressions
Fundamental Properties
Basics of Relations
Different Ways to Represent Relations
100

True or False: The following is an example of an algebraic expression

2 xx 2/(3*x^2)

True

100

What are the names of the properties that have Addition and Multiplication variants?

Commutative and Associative Properties

100

Fill in the blank: A relation is a set of ________ .

Ordered Pairs

100

Fill in the Blank: The 4 ways that we learned to represent relations are by Words, Equations, Tables, and _____ .

Graphs

200

Simplify the following expression:

4x - (2 + 5) * 2x

-10x

200

The Multiplicative Identity Property states what happens when a number is multiplied by ____ while the Multiplicative Property of Zero states what happens when a number is multiplied by ____ .

1, 0

200

Consider the relation {(2,3), (-1, 7), (2, 5)}. On your whiteboard, write the range of this relation.

{3, 7, 5}

200

On your board, represent the following relation as a table:

{(-3, 4), (-1, 3), (1, 2), (3, 1)}

*Solution on student's board.

300

Despite the presence of a variable, the following is not an example of an algebraic expression. Explain why.

y

There are no operators in the statement.

300

Name the following properties used to simplify this equation:

0 + 4x - (6x + 2)


The Multiplicative Identity Property and the Associative Property of Addition

300

Consider the sets D = {3, 5, -4} and R = {5, 9, 1}. On your whiteboard, state a relation that has set D as its domain and R as its range.

Hint: There is more than one answer.

*Multiple answers*

A possible answer is {(3, 5), (5, 9), (-4, 1)}

300

Represent the following scenario in an equation:

For every bottle of water, there are 12 ounces of water.

*Multiple Answers*

A possible answer: w = 12b

400

Simplify the following expression:

(0 * 4 + 4x - 2x)/(5 - 3)

x

400

Name the following properties used to simplify this equation:

(0 * 4 + 4x - 2x)/(5 - 3)

Multiplicative Property of Zero

Additive Identity Property

*Technically Commutative Property of Multiplication

400

(Not on Test) Consider the sets D = {2, 1} and R = {6, 5, 1}. On your whiteboard, state a relation that has set D as its domain and R as its range.

Hint: Sets do not care about duplicates

*Multiple Answers*

A possible answer is {(2,6), (1,5), (1,1)}.

400

(Not on Test) Represent the following relation as an equation:

{(-3, 4), (-1, 3), (1, 2), (3, 1), (5, 0)}

y = 2x + 5