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Sounds trivial, doesn’t it? But this is one of the most important days in the year.
What they do know, from Algebra I, is how to FOIL. This takes two seconds of review and you’re done. However, there are two points that their Algebra I teacher never made.
At this point, they can start working in pairs on the exercise “Multiplying Binomials.” They should have no problem with the first few. As you are walking around, your main job is to make sure that they are doing #5 correctly. They should not be multiplying these out explicitly (so that becomes and then combining the middle terms. They should instead be using the formula that they just developed, to jump straight to the right answer. A lot of them will find this very confusing. I always explain it this way: and a are both placeholders that could represent anything . So when we say:
what we’re really saying is:
Maybe walk them through the first one as an example.
One point of this exercise is to get them to the point where they can see immediately, with no in-between steps , that . Some of them will think that this new, confusing method may be faster, but they can just go right on doing it the “old way” with FOIL. I always explain to them that, in a few days, we’ll be learning a technique called completing the square that involves reversing this formula, and therefore cannot possibly be done with FOIL. They need to know the formula.
Another point is to get our three formulae on the table: , , and . There are very few things I ask the class to memorize during the year, but these three formulae should all be committed to memory.
But the larger point is to give them a new understanding and appreciation for what variables do—to understand that and a represent anything , so that once you have a formula for you can use that formula directly to find .
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