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Jennifer Nguyen
Standards:
the situation.
● Quadratic functions can have average rates of change that are either always increasing or
always decreasing and support the fact that quadratic functions are not linear functions.
This is further emphasized when comparing average rates of change and constant rates of
change.
𝑏
● Moving forward from graph representations of the vertex, the formula𝑥 = − 2𝑎
will
be interpreted as the equation that demonstrates the input or x value where the function
hits either the highest or lowest peak, the x-coordinate of the vertex, the input value to get
the maximum or minimum value, and as the equation of the line of symmetry.
𝑏
● The function notation 𝑓( 2𝑎 )will be used to find the output of the vertex, or the minimum
or maximum value of the function. The input is from the previous formula which gave
Lesson Plan - First Draft 3
the x value of the vertex. To find the maximum or minimum values, the input value found
from that equation is being plugged into our given function and returns the output value.
● When introduced to the discriminant, depending on the sign of the value, it will
determine whether the solutions or roots of the quadratic equation are real solutions or
complex solutions. Imaginary numbers are then used if the solutions are complex. When
the solution is complex, the function doesn’t cross the x-axis. When the discriminant is
zero, there exists only one real solution where the roots are equivalent.
● By using arithmetic operations such as adding and subtracting, we are able to determine
2
𝑏 −4𝑎𝑐
the root values by adding or subtracting the expression ± 2𝑎
to the location of the
line of symmetry.
2
𝑏 −4𝑎𝑐
● When 2𝑎
= 0 it’s confirmed that any function roots must be on the line of
symmetry and interpreted as the vertex and the function’s maximum or minimum value is
0.
● When the entire quadratic formula is introduced, all of the prior concepts will piece
together and each portion of the formula will be able to be identified. Each portion allows
the student to find a different aspect of the function as well as be utilized to support their
prior findings.
● By reviewing common errors when using the quadratic formula and ways to combat
them, students will have two techniques to prevent them from occurring and should have
a stronger understanding of differentiating between each term and its relation to the
quadratic formula.
Lesson Plan - First Draft 4
Day 1 Outline
Warm-Up:
equations using the quadratic formula. The concept map will allow the students to
sort, organize, and connect their prior ideas while also solidifying their
between linear and quadratic functions, average rates of change, and prior
knowledge of roots using graphical representations and algebra. These ideas are
important for the lesson because, without a strong understanding of the format
and meaning of quadratics, they will not be able to connect their prior knowledge
to the new concepts being learned. Students will be able to represent their ideas in
Lesson Outline
Activity What are students What is the teacher Questions Asked Total Time
doing during the doing during the in Lesson
activity? What activity?
questions are Justification?
being asked?
Opening of Students will start The teacher will be What connections could be 0:00-10:00
Class: with a warm-up of asking students to work made between what you
Warm-Up them brainstorming together and to create a know about quadratics and
Activity and creating a map concept map to see other mathematical
(on paper) about what level of prior concepts?
everything they knowledge the students
currently know have. The reasoning What are some topics you
about quadratic behind this activity is to need to understand in
functions and summarize and sort order to have a strong
polynomials. their prior ideas on understanding of
quadratics since the quadratics?
new concepts rely on a
strong understanding of
the prior concepts
taught before.
Direct Students will be The teacher will be How can you use 10:00-25:00
Instruction - following along to asking questions while 𝑥= −
𝑏
to verify or
2𝑎
Breaking the presentation and instructing to promote
support your current
down how writing in their engagement and
understandings of
to find the guided notebooks understanding. The
quadratics?
vertex, input as the teacher teacher will be going
value of introduces over a graph of a
What’s the meaning of
max/min, 𝑥 = − 2𝑎 as
𝑏 quadratic function and 𝑏
and line of relating it to the new 𝑓(− 2𝑎
)and why do we
another way to find
symmetry concept of the formula. use it?
the vertex, the input
The graph will help the
value and the
students make the
output value of the
connections between
max/min, and the
their previous
line of symmetry.
knowledge of
The students will
identifying the
be collaborating in
Lesson Plan - First Draft 6
● Students will be doing a reflective exit-ticket in groups where they will be randomly
given one of the four concepts to summarize and share why they believe that concept was
the most important. This activity will help students share how they interpret the concepts
and by being assigned a random concept, each student has a role in explaining the
significance of each. When they share to each other their reasonings and thought
processes, other students will view different perspectives and thought processes.
Lesson Plan - First Draft 8
Day 2 Outline
Warm-Up:
● Create a one-sentence story using the words: quadratic, roots, vertex, and discriminant.
words involved in this lesson. This activity incorporates writing, creativity, and
synthesizing the information they learned in the past day in order to create a
coherent story. By doing so, they are reviewing the key ideas from Day 1 and
review the concepts involved and depend on the fluidity of their constructed
sentence, it will demonstrate their depth of understanding. This activity also steps
back from the procedural solving and gives them the opportunity to relate the
concepts to real-world situations. When reading the sentences, the teacher will
also have a better insight into how their brain works and their thinking processes.
○ Sample Sentence: Sally slid down the quadratic-shaped water slide and crossed
the roots where the slide touched the water and before she knew it, she was
underwater at the vertex and noticed one discriminant was marked 3 feet away so
Lesson Outline
Activity What are students What is the teacher Questions Asked Total Time
doing during the doing during the in Lesson
activity? What activity?
questions are Justification?
being asked?
Lesson Plan - First Draft 9
Opening of Students will start The teacher will be What was the point of this 0:00-10:00
Class: with a warm-up of asking students to work activity?
Warm-Up them brainstorming together in groups to
Activity and creating a create a one-sentence Did you have trouble
one-sentence story story involving forming a sentence? Why
using the main important vocabulary or why not?
vocabulary words: from day 1 of this
quadratic, roots, lesson. They will be What did this activity help
vertex, and using their skills in you realize?
discriminant. writing, creativity,
teamwork, and
synthesizing to create a
meaningful connection
of the important
concepts.
Direct Students will be The teacher will be How has what we’ve 10:00-18:00
Instruction - utilzing everything presenting the quadratic learned in this unit connect
Bringing it they have learned formula, emphasizing to the quadratic formula?
altogether in the past day to how it is not about
into the bring it altogether memorization but the Why is this format:
Quadratic when introduced idea that all of the 𝑏
2
𝑏 −4𝑎𝑐
𝑥 = − ±
Function the entire quadratic concepts learned are 2𝑎 2𝑎
2
Consider the function 𝑓(𝑥) = − 2𝑥 − 8𝑥 + 20 and suppose we want to know the
values of x such that 𝑓(𝑥) = 15. Use the quadratic formula to evaluate the function.
Solution:
Lesson Plan - First Draft 12
This problem is more procedure-based. Students will begin with identifying how
𝑓(𝑥) = 15 relates to the given function. They will then rewrite the equation in the
2
standard form: 𝑓(𝑥) = 𝑎𝑥 − 𝑏𝑥 + 𝑐 . They should have replaced f(x) with 15,
2
getting 15 = − 2𝑥 − 8𝑥 + 20. Then, the student should be working towards
2
moving the 15 in order to get the equation into the form 𝑎𝑥 − 𝑏𝑥 + 𝑐 = 0 . At this
2
point the students should have the equation − 2𝑥 − 8𝑥 + 5 = 0 and determine
the which values represent a, b, and c. When they do this, they are preparing to set up
these values into the quadratic formula. They should have at this point that a = -2, b = -8,
and c = 5. A common error would be ignoring that f(x)=15 and assuming c = 20. This is
where reading and breaking down the problem would be emphasized before they rush to
plug numbers into the formula. Students should then complete these algebraic steps:
2
𝑏 𝑏 −4𝑎𝑐
𝑥 = − 2𝑎
± 2𝑎
2
(−8) (−8) −4(−2)(5)
𝑥= − 2(−2)
± 2(−2)
104
𝑥=− 2 ± −4
𝑥 ≈ − 2 ± (− 2. 55)
𝑥 ≈ − 4. 55 𝑎𝑛𝑑 0. 55
The students should take note that since the function was adjusted to accommodate when
𝑓(𝑥) = 15, the roots they found are not the roots from the original function. The
students should be able to reason why the roots are different and why the corresponding
2
Solve the equation 2𝑥 + 4𝑥 + 7 = 0 using the Quadratic Formula.
Solution:
This problem is a less straightforward use of the ideas presented in my topic. The
students will be solving this problem involving non-real roots. The students will
determine and define what a, b, and c are defined as in relation to the quadratic formula.
Since this equation is in standard form, students should be able to define a = 2, b = 4, and
c = 7. When they are substituting these values in the quadratic formula, they should get:
2
𝑏 𝑏 −4𝑎𝑐
𝑥 = − 2𝑎
± 2𝑎
2
(4) (4) −4(2)(7)
𝑥= − 2(2)
± 2(2)
4 16−56
𝑥= − 4
± 4
4 −40
𝑥= − 4
± 4
At this particular step, something should pop out to the students. Students should be able
2
to see that the Discriminant or the 𝑏 − 4𝑎𝑐is negative (-40) and determine that this
will affect the outcome of their roots. They should analyze that due to this factor, there
are no real solutions to this quadratic equation, instead, they will use the imaginary
number “i” to simplify the complex solution. The students will use the fact that
Lesson Plan - First Draft 14
2
𝑖 = − 1 which means𝑖 = − 1 . This definition will help them simplify their
solution as follows:
4 −40
𝑥= − 4
± 4
−40
𝑥= − 1 ± 4
4 × −1 × 10
𝑥= − 1 ± 4
2𝑖 10
𝑥= − 1 ± 4
10
𝑥= − 1 ± 2
𝑖
To verify these solutions, the student should graph the function to see where the quadratic
function touches the x-axis. This should confirm their thought process that the graph will
not touch the x-axis at all because their solutions included complex numbers that involve
imaginaries.
Suppose a rock is thrown upward from a bridge into a river below. The height of the rock
above the surface of the water h, measured in a number of feet, can be modeled by the
2
functionℎ = 𝑓(𝑡) = − 16𝑡 + 23𝑡 + 37where t is the number of seconds since
Solution (Starting): When students see this word problem, the first thing they should do
is imagine and draw a visual representation of an estimate of how this quadratic equation
Lesson Plan - First Draft 15
will look like. They should pick apart what the quantities represent and how the
2
a. Use the quadratic formula to solve the equation− 16𝑡 + 23𝑡 + 37 = 0.
Solution:
This problem is the contextual problem. Students should be familiar to this task
since they practiced this in the first couple of problems. The first steps look
familiar and they should be working out the a, b, and c values in relation to the
quadratic formula. After determining a = -16, b = 23, and c = 37, they should
substitute the values into the formula. Instead of using x, students should notice
that the variable in this problem is t which represents the number of seconds since
2
𝑏 𝑏 −4𝑎𝑐
𝑡 = − 2𝑎
± 2𝑎
2
23 (23) −4(−16)(37)
𝑡= − 2(−16)
± 2(−16)
𝑡 ≈− 0. 72 ± (− 1. 68)
At this point, students should have two possible solutions but realize that only one
solution is valid and makes sense. When looking at the variable and what it
represents, time, time cannot be negative. Students should see that 𝑡 ≈-0.96 would
represent a time before the rock was thrown which does not make sense in this
context. This solution is then eliminated and we are left with 2.4 seconds.
Lesson Plan - First Draft 16
Students should define what the 2.4 represents, which is the time when the rock
hits the surface of the river is about 2.4 seconds after it was thrown. Students can
then verify their solution by evaluating the function at t = 2.4 or 𝑓(2. 4).
b. Determine when the rock will reach its maximum height above the water.
Solution:
To determine when the rock will reach the maximum height, students need to
break down the quadratic formula into the smaller parts previously mentioned to
first find the input value of when the maximum height occurs. To do this, they
𝑏
need to recognize that we will use the equation𝑥 = − 2𝑎
, or in this case,
𝑏
𝑡= − 2𝑎
.
23
𝑡= − 2(−16)
𝑡 = 0. 72
At this point, students should add meaning to their solutions. t = 0.72 meaning it
takes 0.72 seconds for the rock to reach its maximum height. They should also be
able to realize that this doesn’t get them the maximum value, but the time it takes
for the rock to reach its maximum height. To find the rock’s maximum height, the
student will need to find𝑓(0. 72), or the output value when it’s been 0.72 seconds
since the rock is thrown. Their algebraic steps should look like this:
Lesson Plan - First Draft 17
2
𝑓(𝑡) = − 16𝑡 + 23𝑡 + 37
2
𝑓(0. 72) = − 16(0. 72) + 23(0. 72) + 37
The student should add units to their solution at this point, stating that the
maximum height occurs after 0.72 since the rock is thrown and the maximum
height is about 45.27 feet. Students could also check their solution by graphing
the quadratic equation. When they found the input, this is also known as the
vertex which is where the maximum value occurs at. On the graph, they can find
the center of the function (vertex) which demonstrates the x value (time since the
rock was thrown) as input and maximum height as the output. They can then
verify the solution matches up with the y-coordinate of the vertex, known as the
function’s maximum.
● Students will be filling out a Google Form reflecting on the last two days and sharing
what meaningful connections they may have made. This activity will allow students to
not only share their feedback and thought processes, but it helps the teacher collect data
and reflect on the instructional activities and lesson plans overall. The meaning behind
this activity is for students to reflect on their learning processes, the topics that connected
with them, and to identify areas where they didn’t feel as confident about. It’s
Lesson Plan - First Draft 18
encouraging them to speak with meaning. The teacher is asking for their input to see if
the way they taught spread the meaning they intended to as well as data to reflect on.