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Mathline

Bottles and Divers
(Rates of Change)
High School Math Project

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Procedure Tips from Ellen
Assessment Resources
Extensions & Adaptations Ideas for Discussion
Mathematically Speaking More Lessons: Grades 9-12


Mathematically Speaking

The NCTM Standards give direction on the content of high school mathematics, indicating that the underpinnings of calculus be included. The standards recommend that maximum and minimum points of a graph, the limiting process, the area under a curve, the rate of change, and the slope of a tangent line be examined from both a graphical and a numerical perspective. This lesson is an informal exploration of rates of change and the derivative.

The derivative and related developments represent one of the most important advances in the history of mathematics. The seventeenth century discoveries of analytical geometry by Descartes and infinitesimal calculus by Newton and Leibnitz are the beginning of modern mathematics. The concepts of limits and the derivative are key ideas in calculus.

Some students do not have the opportunity to explore the concepts involved with the derivative in an informal way before they begin the formal study of calculus. As a result, these students may rely on memorizing formulas and rules rather than clearly understanding the concepts involved. Explorations such as those in this lesson allow students to investigate and explore the important mathematics without the formality that they will encounter later. These explorations and the applications on which the investigations are based help give students a solid mathematical foundation.

In many calculus texts, the derivative of the function y = f(x) is defined as

which can also be written as

How does this differ from

or

?

In the video lesson, the students calculate an approximation for the derivative because they are actually using a particular value for Dx. Help your students realize that there are several ways that an approximation may be calculated. They can determine the slope of the line through points on either side of the given point, through the point and a point slightly above the given point, or through the point and a point slightly below the given point. Also help students to understand that they can get a closer approximation to the instantaneous rate of change by using smaller values for Dx.

As students as they calculate an approximation for the derivative, help them realize that the more they zoom in to a particular area of a graph, the more that particular part of the graph will approximate a straight line. Have the students use the zoom feature of their calculator to examine the graphical implications of calculating the rate of change over a very small period as an approximation of the derivative or the instantaneous rate of change at a particular point.