Study Guide for Exam 2
This will be a closed-book exam. You will be provided this equation sheet. You may use a calculator, but a calculator is not required.
To do well on the exam, you should be able to do the following:
Section 2.1: Functions
List examples of functions from everyday life and biology.
Specify what makes a function more specific than just “a rule that assigns outputs to inputs”.
Give the definition of a function.
Explain how the vertical line test can be used to verify if a curve in the coordinate plane is the graph of a function, and relate this to the definition of a function.
Define the domain and range of a function.
Given a function \(f\):
- Express in words how \(f\) acts on an input \(x\) to generate an output \(f(x)\).
- Evaluate the function at a specified input.
- Find the domain and range of \(f\).
Use the ‘box’ notation on page 150 of the text as a way to think about a variable as a ‘blank space’ for the input to a function.
Demonstrate the correspondence between verbal, algebraic, visual, and numerical representations of a function by converting from one representation to another.
Evaluate a piecewise function by reading left-to-right: first determine the condition on the input \(x\), then determine the output under that condition.
Section 2.4: Average Rate of Change of a Function
- Define the net change of a function from \(x = a\) to \(x = b\).
- Define the average rate of change of a function \(f\) between \(x = a\) and \(x = b\) in terms of \(a, b, f(a)\), and \(f(b)\).
- Define the average rate of change of a function as the ‘rise’ of the function over the ‘run’ of the function.
- Relate the average rate of change of a function \(f\) to the slope of the line segment between \((a, f(a))\) and \((b, f(b))\).
Section 2.5: Linear Functions and Models
Explain the meaning of the statement: “the only things linear functions can do is go up, go down, or stay flat.”
Specify the standard form of a linear function.
Given a linear function in non-standard form, rewrite the function in standard form.
Given a function, determine whether the function is linear or nonlinear.
Graph a linear function given one of:
- The equation for the function
- The slope and intercept of the function
- The slope and a point on the graph of the function
- Two points on the graph of the function
Compute the slope of a linear function using the average rate of change of the function.
Compute the slope of a linear function as ‘rise over run.’
Determine the form of a linear function from a ‘word problem’ given the requisite information to determine the equation of a line.
Section 3.1: Quadratic Functions and Models
- Identify whether a quadratic function opens up or down using its coefficients.
- Identify where a quadratic function obtains a particular value.
- Express a quadratic function given as \(f(x) = a x^{2} + b x + c\) in standard form \(f(x) = a(x - h)^2 + k\), using the result from the top of page 249 of Stewart, Redlin, and Watson.
- Define the properties of a global minimum / maximum of a function.
- Identify when a quadratic function has a global maximum / minimum, and identify where the maximum / minimum occurs and its value.
- Identify when a quadratic function is an appropriate model for a scientific question, locate the relevant information needed to construct the quadratic function, and identify the relevant characteristics of the quadratic function for answering the original question.
Section 3.2: Polynomial Functions and Their Graphs
- Determine the degree, coefficients, and leading term of a given polynomial function.
- Given a graph of a function, determine whether the function could be a polynomial function.
- Determine the end behavior of a given polynomial function.
- Given a factored polynomial function \(P\), determine the roots / zeros / horizontal intercepts of the polynomial function.
- Given the graph of a polynomial function \(P\), determine the roots / zeros / horizontal intercepts of the polynomial function.
- Sketch the graph of a given polynomial function using the method in the grey box at the bottom of page 259 of Stewart, Redlin, and Watson.