ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Statistics and Probability Videos 134 videos
Statistics, Data, and Probability I: Drill Set 3, Problem 4. How many different avatars can be created based on the given options?
Statistics, Data, and Probability II Drill 3 Problem 2. Which two sports together make up for the preferences of more than half of all those w...
CAHSEE Math 4.4 Algebra and Functions 390 Views
Share It!
Description:
Algebra and Functions: Drill Set 4, Problem 4. Which of the following is the graph of the expression?
Algebra and Functions: Drill Set 4, Problem 4. Which of the following is the graph of the expression?
Transcript
- 00:03
And here's a shmoop du jour for you and your brain.
- 00:07
Which of the following is the graph of y = negative two-thirds x?
- 00:11
Here are the potential answers...
- 00:14
Hit pause. Try them yourself.
- 00:19
So we're looking at an equation of a graph.
Full Transcript
- 00:21
Do we recognize what form it's in?
- 00:24
Well, slope-intercept form is y = mx + b...and our equation sort of looks like that...
- 00:30
...where m is negative 2/3 and b is 0. Check. Great, so remember what m tells us?
- 00:37
It tells us the slope of the line, or rise over run.
- 00:40
A negative slope tells us that the graph's y values decrease as x increases...
- 00:52
...so we know that our answer must either be B or D.
- 00:56
We can rule out graphs A and C because they both have positive slopes.
- 01:01
Concentrating on graphs (B) and (D), a slope of -2 over 3 implies that, from one point
- 01:07
to another, we go down by 2, and to the right by 3.
- 01:12
Both graphs intersect the origin, so if we start from the origin,
- 01:17
we would go down 2 units and right 3 units...
- 01:20
...which means we should arrive at the point (3, -2), another point on the line.
- 01:25
Graph D doesn't include (3,-2), so the answer must be B.
- 01:29
There's always next year, D.
Related Videos
CAHSEE Math: Algebra and Functions Drill 5, Problem 3. Solve the equation.
We don't like knocking people down to size, but we do like simplifying radicals. Join us?
If fleeing criminals always fled the scene of the crime at perfect right angles, it would be much easier to determine their whereabouts. Fortunatel...
Okay, so this probably isn't going to help you master Pokemon Go, but game theory can be applied to all sorts of situations. Even stomping your old...