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Calculus Initial Questions |
reviews and helps assess certain important aspects of the student's preparation in the prerequisite precalculus or analysis course | more about how to communicate some calculus-based ideas; maybe a little more about some of these ideas |
Copy and paste this document into a text editor, insert your responses and submit using the Submit_Work_Form.
If your solution to stated problem does not match the given solution, you should self-critique per instructions at
http://vhcc2.vhcc.edu/dsmith/geninfo/labrynth_created_fall_05/levl1_22/levl2_81/file3_259.htm
.
Your solution, attempt at solution. If you are unable to attempt a solution, give a phrase-by-phrase interpretation of the problem along with a statement of what you do or do not understand about it. This response should be given, based on the work you did in completing the assignment, before you look at the given solution.
005. Calculus
Question: `q001. There are 12 questions in this document.
The graph of a
certain function is a smooth curve passing through the points (3, 5), (7, 17)
and (10, 29).
Between which two points do you think the graph is steeper,
on the average?
Why do we say 'on the
average'?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aSlope = rise / run.
Between points (7, 17) and (10, 29) we get rise / run = (29
- 17) / (10 - 7) =12 / 3 = 4.
The slope between points (3, 5) and (7, 17) is 3 / 1. (17 - 5) / (7 -3) = 12 / 4 = 3.
The segment with slope 4 is the steeper. The graph being a
smooth curve, slopes may vary from point to point. The slope obtained over the interval is a
specific type of average of the slopes of all points between the endpoints.
2. Answer without
using a calculator: As x takes the values 2.1, 2.01, 2.001 and 2.0001, what
values are taken by the expression 1 / (x - 2)?
1. As the process
continues, with x getting closer and closer to 2, what happens to the values of
1 / (x-2)?
2. Will the value
ever exceed a billion? Will it ever
exceed one trillion billions?
3. Will it ever
exceed the number of particles in the known universe?
4. Is there any
number it will never exceed?
5. What does the
graph of y = 1 / (x-2) look like in the vicinity of x = 2?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aFor x = 2.1, 2.01,
2.001, 2.0001 we see that x -2 = .1, .01, .001, .0001. Thus 1/(x -2) takes respective values 10,
100, 1000, 10,000.
It is important to note that x is changing by smaller and
smaller increments as it approaches 2, while the value of the function is
changing by greater and greater amounts.
As x gets closer in closer to 2, it will reach the values
2.00001, 2.0000001, etc.. Since we can put as many zeros as we want in
.000...001 the reciprocal 100...000 can be as large as we desire. Given any number, we can exceed it.
Note that the
function is simply not defined for x = 2.
We cannot divide 1 by 0 (try counting to 1 by 0's..You
never get anywhere. It can't be
done. You can count to 1 by .1's--.1,
.2, .3, ..., .9, 1.
You get 10. You can do similar
thing for .01, .001, etc., but you just can't do it for 0).
As x approaches 2 the graph approaches the vertical line x =
2; the graph itself is never vertical.
That is, the graph will have a vertical asymptote at the line x =
2. As x approaches 2, therefore, 1 /
(x-2) will exceed all bounds.
Note that if x approaches 2 through the values 1.9, 1.99, ..., the function gives us -10, -100, etc.. So we can see
that on one side of x = 2 the graph will approach +infinity, on the other it
will be negative and approach -infinity.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q003. One straight line segment connects the points (3,5) and (7,9) while another connects the points (10,2) and
(50,4). From each of the four points a
line segment is drawn directly down to the x axis, forming two trapezoids.
Which trapezoid has the greater area?
Try to justify your answer with something more precise than, for
example, 'from a sketch I can see that this one is much bigger so it must have
the greater area'.
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aYour sketch should show that
while the first trapezoid averages a little more than double the altitude of
the second, the second is clearly much more than twice as wide and hence has
the greater area.
To justify this a little more precisely, the first
trapezoid, which runs from x = 3 to x = 7, is 4 units wide while the second
runs from x = 10 and to x = 50 and hence has a width of 40 units. The altitudes of the first trapezoid are 5 and
9,so the average altitude of the first is 7. The average altitude of the second is the
average of the altitudes 2 and 4, or 3.
So the first trapezoid is over twice as high, on the average, as the
first. However the second is 10 times as
wide, so the second trapezoid must have the greater area.
This is all the reasoning we need to answer the
question. We could of course multiply
average altitude by width for each trapezoid, obtaining area 7 * 4 = 28 for the
first and 3 * 40 = 120 for the second.
However if all we need to know is which trapezoid has a greater area, we
need not bother with this step.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q004. If f(x) = x^2
(meaning 'x raised to the power 2') then which is
steeper, the line segment connecting the x = 2 and x = 5 points on the graph of
f(x), or the line segment connecting the x = -1 and x = 7 points on the same
graph? Explain the basis of
your reasoning.
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aThe line segment connecting x =
2 and the x = 5 points is steeper: Since f(x) =
x^2, x = 2 gives y = 4 and x = 5 gives y = 25. The slope between the
points is rise / run = (25 - 4) / (5 - 2) = 21 / 3 = 7.
The line segment connecting the x = -1 point (-1,1) and the x = 7 point (7,49) has a slope of (49 - 1) / (7
- -1) = 48 / 8 = 6.
The slope of the first segment is greater.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q005. Suppose that
every week of the current millennium you go to the jeweler and obtain a certain number of grams of pure gold,
which you then place in an old sock and bury in your backyard. Assume that buried gold lasts a long, long
time ( this is so), that the the
gold remains undisturbed (maybe, maybe not so), that no other source adds gold
to your backyard (probably so), and that there was no gold in your yard
before..
1. If you construct a
graph of y = the number of grams of gold in your backyard vs. t = the number of
weeks since Jan. 1, 2000, with the y axis pointing up and the t axis pointing
to the right, will the points on your graph lie on a level straight line, a
rising straight line, a falling straight line, a line which rises faster and
faster, a line which rises but more and more slowly, a line which falls faster
and faster, or a line which falls but more and more slowly?
2. Answer the same
question assuming that every week you bury 1 more gram than you did the
previous week.
3. Answer the same question assuming that every week you
bury half the amount you did the previous week.
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`a1. If it's the same
amount each week it would be a straight line.
2. Buying gold every week, the amount of gold
will always increase. Since you buy more
each week the rate of increase will keep increasing. So the graph will increase, and at an
increasing rate.
3. Buying gold every
week, the amount of gold won't ever decrease.
Since you buy less each week the rate of increase will just keep
falling. So the graph will increase, but
at a decreasing rate. This graph will in fact approach a horizontal asymptote,
since we have a geometric progression which implies an exponential function.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q006. Suppose that
every week you go to the jeweler and obtain a certain
number of grams of pure gold, which you then place in an old sock and bury in
your backyard. Assume that buried gold
lasts a long, long time, that the the gold remains
undisturbed, and that no other source adds gold to your backyard.
1. If you graph the
rate at which gold is accumulating from week to week vs. the
number of weeks since Jan 1, 2000, will the points on your graph lie on a level
straight line, a rising straight line, a falling straight line, a line which
rises faster and faster, a line which rises but more and more slowly, a line
which falls faster and faster, or a line which falls but more and more
slowly?
2. Answer the same
question assuming that every week you bury 1 more gram than you did the
previous week.
3. Answer the same question assuming that every week you
bury half the amount you did the previous week.
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aThis set of questions is
different from the preceding set. This
question now asks about a graph of rate vs. time, whereas the last was about
the graph of quantity vs. time.
Question 1: This question concerns the graph of the rate
at which gold accumulates, which in this case, since you buy the same amount eact week, is constant. The graph would be a horizontal straight
line.
Question 2: Each week
you buy one more gram than the week before, so the rate goes up each week by 1
gram per week. You thus get a risingstraight line because the increase in the rate is the
same from one week to the next.
Question 3. Since half the previous amount will be half of a declining amount, the rate will decrease while remaining positive, so the graph remains positive as it decreases more and more slowly. The rate approaches but never reaches zero.
STUDENT COMMENT: I feel like I am having trouble
visualizing these graphs because every time for the first one I picture an
increasing straight line
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE: The first graph depicts the amount of gold you have
in your back yard. The second depicts the rate at which the gold is
accumulating, which is related to, but certainly not the same as, the amount of
gold.
For example, as long as gold is being added to the back yard, the amount will be
increasing (though not necessarily on a straight line). However if less and less
gold is being added every year, the rate will be decreasing (perhaps along a
straight line, perhaps not).
FREQUENT STUDENT RESPONSE
This is the same as the problem before it. No self-critique is required.
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE
This question is very different that the preceding, and in a
very significant and important way. You should have
self-critiqued; you should go back and insert a self-critique on this very
important question and indicate your insertion by
preceding it with ####. The extra effort will be more than worth your
trouble.
These two problems go to the heart of the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, which is the heart of this course, and the extra effort will be well worth it in the long run. The same is true of the last question in this document.
STUDENT COMMENT
Aha! Well you had me tricked. I apparently
misread the question. Please don’t do this on a test!
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE
I don't usually try to trick people, and
wasn't really trying to do so here, but I was aware when writing these two
problems that most students would be tricked.
My real goal: The distinction between these two problems is key to understanding
what calculus is all about. I want to at least draw your attention to it early
in the course.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
``q007. If the depth of water in a container is
given, in centimeters, by 100 - 2 t + .01 t^2, where t is clock time in
seconds, then what are the depths at clock times t = 30, t = 40 and t =
60? On the average is depth changing
more rapidly during the first time interval or the second?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aAt t = 30 we get depth = 100 - 2
t + .01 t^2 = 100 - 2 * 30 + .01 * 30^2 = 49.
At t = 40 we get depth = 100 - 2 t + .01 t^2 = 100 - 2 * 40
+ .01 * 40^2 = 36.
At t = 60 we get depth = 100 - 2 t + .01 t^2 = 100 - 2 * 60
+ .01 * 60^2 = 16.
49 cm - 36 cm = 13 cm change in 10 sec or 1.3 cm/s on the
average.
36 cm - 16 cm = 20 cm change in 20 sec or 1.0 cm/s on the
average.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question:
`q008. If the rate at
which water descends in a container is given, in cm/s, by 10 - .1 t, where t is
clock time in seconds, then at what rate is water descending when t = 10, and
at what rate is it descending when t = 20?
How much would you therefore expect the water level to change during
this 10-second interval?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Given Solution:
`aAt t = 10 sec the rate function
gives us 10 - .1 * 10 = 10 - 1 = 9, meaning a rate of 9 cm / sec.
At t = 20 sec the rate function gives us 10 - .1 * 20 = 10 -
2 = 8, meaning a rate of 8 cm / sec.
The rate never goes below 8 cm/s, so in 10 sec the change
wouldn't be less than 80 cm.
The rate never goes above 9 cm/s, so in 10 sec the change
wouldn't be greater than 90 cm.
Any answer that isn't between 80 cm and 90 cm doesn't fit
the given conditions..
The rate change is a linear function of t. Therefore the average rate is the average of
the two rates, or 8.5 cm/s.
The average of the rates is 8.5 cm/sec. In 10 sec that would imply a change of 85 cm.
STUDENT RESPONSES
The following, or some variation on them, are very common in student comments. They are both very good questions. Because of the importance of the required to answer this question correctly, the instructor will typically request for a revision in response to either student response:
I don't understand how the answer isn't 1 cm/s. That's the difference between 8 cm/s and 9 cm/s.
I don't understand how the answer isn't 8.5 cm/s. That's the average of the 8 cm/s and the 9 cm/s.
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE
A self-critique should include a full statement of what you do and do not understand about the given solution. A phrase-by-phrase analysis of the solution is not unreasonable (and would be a good idea on this very important question), though it wouldn't be necessary in most situations.
An important part of any self-critique is a good question, and you have asked one. However a self-critique should if possible go further. I'm asking that you go back and insert a self-critique on this very important question and indicate your insertion by preceding it with ####, before submitting it. The extra effort will be more than worth your trouble.
This problem, along with questions 5 and 6 of this document, go to the heart of the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, which is the heart of this course, and the extra effort will be well worth it in the long run.
You should review the instructions for self-critique, provided at the link given at the beginning of this document.
STUDENT COMMENT
The question is worded very confusingly. I took a stab and
answered correctly. When answering, ""How much would you
therefore expect the water level to change during this 10-second interval?"" It
is hard to tell whether you are asking for
what is the expected change in rate during this interval and what is the
changing ""water level."" But now, after looking at
it, with your comments, it is clearer that I should be looking for the later.
Thanks!
INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE
'Water level' is clearly not a rate. I don't think there's
any ambiguity in what's being asked in the stated question.
The intent is to draw the very important distinction between the rate at which a
quantity changes, and the change in the quantity.
It seems clear that as a result of this question you understand this and will be
more likely to make such distinctions in your subsequent work.
This distinction is at the heart of the calculus and its applications. It is in fact the distinction between a derivative and an integral.
Self-critique (if necessary):
Self-critique Rating:
Question: `q009. Sketch the line segment connecting the points (2, -4) and (6, 4), and the line segment connecting the points (2, 4) and (6, 1). The first of these lines if the graph of the function f(x), the second is the graph of the function g(x). Both functions are defined on the interval 2 <= x <= 6.
Let h(x) be the function whose value at x is the product of the values of these two functions. For example, when x = 2 the value of the first function is -4 and the value of the second is 4, so when x = 2 the value of h(x) is -4 * 4 = -16.
Answer the following based just on the characteristics of the graphs you have sketched. (e.g., you could answer the following questions by first finding the formulas for f(x) and g(x), then combining them to get a formula for h(x); that's a good skill but that is not the intent of the present set of questions).
What is the value of h(x) when x = 6?
Is the value of h(x) ever greater than its value at x = 6?
What is your best description of the graph of h(x)?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Question: `q010. A straight line segment connects the points (3,5) and (7,9), while the points (3, 9) and (7, 5) are connected by a curve which decreases at an increasing rate. From each of the four points a line segment is drawn directly down to the x axis, so that the first line segment is the top of a trapezoid and the second a similar to a trapezoid but with a curved 'top'. Which trapezoid has the greater area?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Question: `q011. Describe the graph of the position of a car vs. clock time, given each of the following conditions:
The car coasts down a straight incline, gaining the same amount of speed every second
The car coasts down a hill which gets steeper and steeper, gaining more speed every second
The car coasts down a straight incline, but due to increasing air resistance gaining less speed with every passing second
Describe
the graph of the rate of change of the position of a car vs. clock time, given
each of the above conditions.
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Question: `q012. If at t = 100 seconds water is flowing out of a container at the rate of 1.4 liters / second, and at t = 150 second the rate is 1.0 liters / second, then what is your best estimate of how much water flowed out during the 50-second interval?
Your solution:
Confidence Assessment:
Self-critique Rating: