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An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman
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An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Mar 26, 2015

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Page 1: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

An Introduction to Inequalities

Presented by J. Grossman

Page 2: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Definition

An inequality is a mathematical statement that one quantity is

greater than or less than another.

Page 3: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

An inequality is like an equation, but instead of an equal sign (=) it

has one of these signs:

< : less than≤ : less than or equal to

> : greater than≥ : greater than or equal to

Page 4: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

A solution of an inequality is any real number that makes the inequality true. For example, the solutions of the inequality x < 3 are all real numbers that are less than 3.

Can you name them all?

Why? Why not?

Page 5: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

x < 5means that whatever

numerical value x has, it must be less than 5.

Name ten numbers that are less than 5!

Page 6: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Numbers less than 5 are to the left of 5 on the number line.

0 5 10 15-20 -15 -10 -5-25 20 25

• If you said 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, -1, -2, -3, etc., you are right.• There are also numbers in between the integers, like 2.5, 1/2, -7.9, etc. • The number 5 would not be a correct answer, though, because 5 is not less than 5.

Page 7: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

x ≥ -2

means that whatever value x has, it must be greater than or

equal to -2.

Name ten numbers that are greater than or equal to -2!

Page 8: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Numbers greater than -2 are to the right of -2 on the number line.

0 5 10 15-20 -15 -10 -5-25 20 25

• If you said -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, etc., you are right.• There are also numbers in between the integers, like -1/2, 0.2, 3.1, 5.5, etc. • The number -2 would also be a correct answer, because of the phrase, “or equal to”.

-2

Page 9: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Where is -1.5 on the number line? Is it greater or less than -2?

0 5 10 15-20 -15 -10 -5-25 20 25

• -1.5 is between -1 and -2.• -1 is to the right of -2.• So -1.5 is also to the right of -2.

-2

Page 10: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Three Ways to State an Inequality

• Use inequality notation. • Use interval (or set) notation.

• Graphically display the solution on a number line.

{x | x < –3} all x such that x is less than minus three

{x | x is a real number, x < –3}

x < –3 x is less than minus three

the interval from minus infinity to minus three

Page 11: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Graphing Inequalitiesx > c

When x is greater than a constant, you darken in the part of the number line that is to the right of the constant. Also, because there is no equal line, we are not including where x is equal to the constant. That means we are not including the endpoint. One way to notate that is to use an open circle at that point on the number line.

Page 12: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Graphing Inequalitiesx < c

When x is less than a constant, you darken in the part of the number line that is to the left of the constant. Also, because there is no equal line, we are not including where x is equal to the constant. That means we are not including the endpoint. One way to notate that is to use an open circle at that point on the number line.

Page 13: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Graphing Inequalitiesx < c

When x is less than or equal to a constant, you darken in the part of the number line that is to the left of the constant. Also, because there is an equal line, we are including where x is equal to the constant. That means we are including the endpoint. One way to notate that is to use a closed circle at that point on the number line.

Page 14: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Graphing Inequalitiesx > c

When x is greater than or equal to a constant, you darken in the part of the number line that is to the right of the constant. Also, because there is an equal line, we are including where x is equal to the constant. That means we are including the endpoint. One way to notate that is to use a closed circle at that point on the number line.

Page 15: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Practice Graphing Inequalities

54x

16x

7

5y

17x

7z

0h

Page 16: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Practice Graphing Inequalitiesx is less than 5

y is greater than -3

A number n is positive

b is less than or equal to eight

The speed limit is posted 55 mph. Write and graph an inequality for this situation.

Page 17: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

More practice… state the inequality that has been graphed.

Page 18: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

From the Internet

Online Graphing Calculators

http://education.jlab.org/sminequality/index.html

http://webgraphing.com

SpeedMath -- Inequalities

Page 19: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Any Questions???

Pre-Algebra Study Guide Practice 2-8, all problems.

Algebra Study Guide Practice 3-1, all problems.

Homework…

Page 20: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Next step...

Using Addition or Subtraction

Using Multiplication or Division

Solve Inequalities

Page 21: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Reference: CPM Algebra Connections

Page 22: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Solving an Inequality Using Addition or Subtraction

Solving inequalities that involve addition or subtraction is just like solving equations that involve addition or subtraction. When solving linear inequalities, we use a lot of the same concepts that we use when solving linear equations.  Basically, we still want to get the variable on one side and everything else on the other side by using inverse operations.  The difference is, when a variable is set equal to one number, that number is the only solution.  But, when a variable is less than or greater than a number, there are an infinite number of values that would be a part of the answer. 

Page 23: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Solving Inequality Using Addition or Subtraction

Example 1: Solve the following inequality and graph the solution set.

Graph:

Page 24: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Solving an Inequality Using Addition or Subtraction

Example 2: Solve the following inequality and graph the solution set.

Graph:

               

Page 25: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Solving an Inequality Using Addition or Subtraction

Example 3: Solve the following inequality and graph the solution set.

Graph:

              

Page 26: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Solving an Inequality Using Addition or Subtraction

Example 4: Solve the following inequality and graph the solution set.

Page 27: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Solving an Inequality Using Addition or Subtraction

Example 5: Solve the following inequality and graph the solution set.

  4x > 28

 

  A. {x | x < 4} B. {x | x < 7}

    C. {x | x > 28} D. {x | x > 7}

Page 28: An Introduction to Inequalities Presented by J. Grossman.

Solving an Inequality Using Addition or Subtraction

Addition/Subtraction Property for Inequalities

If a < b, then a + c < b + c

If a < b, then a - c < b – c

In other words, adding or subtracting the same expression to both sides of an inequality does not change the inequality.