Functions and Change: A Modeling Approach to College Algebra (MindTap Course List)
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781337111348
Author: Bruce Crauder, Benny Evans, Alan Noell
Publisher: Cengage Learning
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Question
Chapter 1.FR1, Problem 5E
To determine
To find:
The average rate of change for
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 1 Solutions
Functions and Change: A Modeling Approach to College Algebra (MindTap Course List)
Ch. 1.1 - Explain the meaning of G(4,3,2) and calculate its...Ch. 1.1 - What is your monthly payment if you borrow 5000 at...Ch. 1.1 - Movie Tickets According to information provided by...Ch. 1.1 - McDonalds The formula M(t)=1.19t+13.22 gives the...Ch. 1.1 - Speed from Skid Marks When a car makes an...Ch. 1.1 - Harris-Benedict Formula Your basal metabolic rate...Ch. 1.1 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.1 - Gross Profit Margin The gross profit margin is a...Ch. 1.1 - Tax Owed The income tax T owed in a certain state...Ch. 1.1 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...
Ch. 1.1 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.1 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.1 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.1 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.1 - Round all answers to two decimal places unless...Ch. 1.1 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.1 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.1 - Prob. 16ECh. 1.1 - Round all answers to two decimal places unless...Ch. 1.1 - Prob. 18ECh. 1.1 - Prob. 19ECh. 1.1 - Prob. 20ECh. 1.1 - Prob. 21ECh. 1.1 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.1 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.1 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.1 - Prob. 25ECh. 1.1 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.1 - Prob. 27ECh. 1.1 - Prob. 28ECh. 1.1 - Prob. 29ECh. 1.1 - Prob. 30ECh. 1.1 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.1 - Prob. 32ECh. 1.1 - Prob. 1SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 2SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 3SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 4SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 5SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 6SBECh. 1.1 - Evaluating Formulas In Exercises S-1 through S-24,...Ch. 1.1 - Prob. 8SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 9SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 10SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 11SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 12SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 13SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 14SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 15SBECh. 1.1 - Evaluating Formulas In Exercises S-1 through S-24,...Ch. 1.1 - Prob. 17SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 18SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 19SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 20SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 21SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 22SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 23SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 24SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 25SBECh. 1.1 - What Formulas Mean In Exercises S-25 through S-33,...Ch. 1.1 - Prob. 27SBECh. 1.1 - What Formulas Mean In Exercises S-25 through S-33,...Ch. 1.1 - Prob. 29SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 30SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 31SBECh. 1.1 - Prob. 32SBECh. 1.1 - What Formulas Mean In Exercises S-25 through S-33,...Ch. 1.2 - TEST YOUR UNDERSTANDING|FOR EXAMPLE 1.3 Use the...Ch. 1.2 - Use the table of values you made in part 4 of the...Ch. 1.2 - Minimum Wage The table below is taken from the...Ch. 1.2 - Mortgage Rates The following table is taken from...Ch. 1.2 - Box Office Hits The table below shows the highest...Ch. 1.2 - Mobile Phone Sales In 2000, mobile handset sales...Ch. 1.2 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.2 - Freight on Class I Railroads According to the...Ch. 1.2 - The American Food Dollar The following table shows...Ch. 1.2 - Gross Domestic Product The following table shows...Ch. 1.2 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.2 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.2 - A Troublesome Snowball One winter afternoon,...Ch. 1.2 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.2 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.2 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.2 - Prob. 15ECh. 1.2 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.2 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.2 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.2 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.2 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.2 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.2 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.2 - Prob. 23ECh. 1.2 - Round all answers to two decimal places unless...Ch. 1.2 - Round all answers to two decimal places unless...Ch. 1.2 - Prob. 26ECh. 1.2 - Prob. 27ECh. 1.2 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.2 - Prob. 1SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 2SBECh. 1.2 - For these exercises, round all estimates to one...Ch. 1.2 - Prob. 4SBECh. 1.2 - For these exercises, round all estimates to one...Ch. 1.2 - Prob. 6SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 7SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 8SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 9SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 10SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 11SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 12SBECh. 1.2 - For these exercises, round all estimates to one...Ch. 1.2 - Prob. 14SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 15SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 16SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 17SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 18SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 19SBECh. 1.2 - For these exercises, round all estimates to one...Ch. 1.2 - Prob. 21SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 22SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 23SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 24SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 25SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 26SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 27SBECh. 1.2 - Prob. 28SBECh. 1.2 - For these exercises, round all estimates to one...Ch. 1.2 - For these exercises, round all estimates to one...Ch. 1.2 - When Limiting Values Occur Suppose S(t) represents...Ch. 1.2 - Does a Limiting Value Occur? A rocket ship is...Ch. 1.3 - TEST YOUR UNDERSTANDING | FOR EXAMPLE 1.5 From...Ch. 1.3 - TEST YOUR UNDERSTANDING | FOR EXAMPLE 1.6 Locate a...Ch. 1.3 - Prob. 3TUCh. 1.3 - Prob. 4TUCh. 1.3 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.3 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.3 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.3 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.3 - Prob. 5ECh. 1.3 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.3 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.3 - Prob. 8ECh. 1.3 - Prob. 9ECh. 1.3 - Prob. 10ECh. 1.3 - Prob. 11ECh. 1.3 - Prob. 12ECh. 1.3 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.3 - Prob. 14ECh. 1.3 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.3 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.3 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.3 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.3 - Prob. 19ECh. 1.3 - Prob. 20ECh. 1.3 - Prob. 21ECh. 1.3 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.3 - Prob. 23ECh. 1.3 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.3 - Prob. 25ECh. 1.3 - Prob. 26ECh. 1.3 - Prob. 27ECh. 1.3 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.3 - Prob. 29ECh. 1.3 - Prob. 30ECh. 1.3 - Prob. 31ECh. 1.3 - Prob. 1SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 2SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 3SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 4SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 5SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 6SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 7SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 8SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 9SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 10SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 11SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 12SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 13SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 14SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 15SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 16SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 17SBECh. 1.3 - A Function Given by a Graph The following is the...Ch. 1.3 - Prob. 19SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 20SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 21SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 22SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 23SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 24SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 25SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 26SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 27SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 28SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 29SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 30SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 31SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 32SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 33SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 34SBECh. 1.3 - Prob. 35SBECh. 1.4 - TEST YOUR UNDERSTANDING Suppose we start with 9...Ch. 1.4 - Prob. 2TUCh. 1.4 - Prob. 3TUCh. 1.4 - Prob. 4TUCh. 1.4 - Prob. 1ECh. 1.4 - Prob. 2ECh. 1.4 - Reminder: Round all answer to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - Reminder: Round all answer to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - 5. United States Population Growth In 1960 the...Ch. 1.4 - Prob. 6ECh. 1.4 - a. Use a formula to express the altitude of a...Ch. 1.4 - Reminder: Round all answer to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - Reminder: Round all answer to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - Reminder: Round all answer to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - Remainder: Round all answer to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - m Miles per Gallon The cost of operating a car...Ch. 1.4 - Prob. 13ECh. 1.4 - Continued This is a continuation of Exercise 13....Ch. 1.4 - Reminder: Round all answer to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - Reminder:-Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - Prob. 22ECh. 1.4 - Prob. 23ECh. 1.4 - ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - Reminder:-Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.4 - Prob. 26ECh. 1.4 - Prob. 27ECh. 1.4 - Hubbles Constant Astronomers believe that the...Ch. 1.4 - Prob. 29ECh. 1.4 - Prob. 30ECh. 1.4 - Prob. 1SBECh. 1.4 - Light It is 93,000,000 miles from the earth to the...Ch. 1.4 - Prob. 3SBECh. 1.4 - Getting a Formula In Exercises S-4 through S-13, a...Ch. 1.4 - Prob. 5SBECh. 1.4 - Getting a Formula In Exercises S-4 through S-13, a...Ch. 1.4 - Getting a Formula In Exercises S-4 through S-13, a...Ch. 1.4 - Prob. 8SBECh. 1.4 - Prob. 9SBECh. 1.4 - Prob. 10SBECh. 1.4 - Prob. 11SBECh. 1.4 - Getting a Formula In Exercises S-4 through S-13, a...Ch. 1.4 - Getting a Formula In Exercises S-4 through S-13, a...Ch. 1.4 - Prob. 14SBECh. 1.4 - Prob. 15SBECh. 1.4 - Prob. 16SBECh. 1.4 - Is it Proportional? In Exercises S-17 through...Ch. 1.4 - Prob. 18SBECh. 1.4 - Prob. 19SBECh. 1.4 - Prob. 20SBECh. 1.4 - Prob. 21SBECh. 1.4 - Is it Proportional? In Exercises S17 through S25,...Ch. 1.4 - Prob. 23SBECh. 1.4 - Prob. 24SBECh. 1.4 - Is it Proportional? In Exercises S17 through S25,...Ch. 1.CR - Prob. 1CRCh. 1.CR - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.CR - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.CR - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.CR - Prob. 5CRCh. 1.CR - Prob. 6CRCh. 1.CR - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.CR - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.CR - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.CR - Round all answers to two decimal places unless...Ch. 1.CR - Prob. 11CRCh. 1.CR - Prob. 12CRCh. 1.CR - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.CR - Prob. 14CRCh. 1.CR - Prob. 15CRCh. 1.CR - Prob. 16CRCh. 1.CR - Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places...Ch. 1.CR - Prob. 18CRCh. 1.FR1 - Prob. 1TUCh. 1.FR1 - Prob. 1ECh. 1.FR1 - Prob. 2ECh. 1.FR1 - Prob. 3ECh. 1.FR1 - Prob. 4ECh. 1.FR1 - Prob. 5ECh. 1.FR1 - Prob. 6ECh. 1.FR1 - Prob. 7ECh. 1.FR1 - Prob. 8ECh. 1.FR1 - Prob. 9ECh. 1.FR1 - Prob. 10ECh. 1.FR1 - Prob. 11ECh. 1.FR1 - Prob. 12ECh. 1.FR1 - Prob. 13ECh. 1.FR2 - Prob. 1TUCh. 1.FR2 - Prob. 2TUCh. 1.FR2 - Prob. 1ECh. 1.FR2 - Prob. 2ECh. 1.FR2 - Prob. 3ECh. 1.FR2 - Prob. 4ECh. 1.FR2 - Prob. 5ECh. 1.FR2 - Prob. 6ECh. 1.FR2 - Prob. 7ECh. 1.FR2 - Prob. 8ECh. 1.FR2 - Prob. 9ECh. 1.FR2 - Prob. 10ECh. 1.FR2 - Prob. 11ECh. 1.FR2 - Prob. 12ECh. 1.FR3 - If f(x)=x+3x1, find f(2).Ch. 1.FR3 - Prob. 2ECh. 1.FR3 - Prob. 3ECh. 1.FR3 - If f(x)=xx2, find f(x2). Hint: Replace x in the...Ch. 1.FR3 - Prob. 5ECh. 1.FR3 - Prob. 6ECh. 1.FR3 - Prob. 7ECh. 1.FR3 - Prob. 8ECh. 1.FR3 - Prob. 9ECh. 1.FR3 - Prob. 10E
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, algebra and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places unless otherwise indicated. Deaths from the Heart DiseaseTable A and B show the deaths per 100,000 caused by heart disease in the United States for males and females aged 55 to 64 years. The function Hm gives deaths per 100,000 for males, and Hf gives deaths per 100,000 for females. a.Approximate the value of dHmdt in 2004 using the average rate of change from 2004 to 2007. b.Explain the meaning of the number you calculated in part a in practical terms. You should, among other things, tell what the sign means. TABLE AHeart Disease Deaths per 100,000 for Males Aged 55 to 64 Years t=year Hm=deathsper100,000 1990 537.3 2000 371.7 2003 331.7 2004 312.8 2007 288.8 c.Use your answer from part a to estimate the heart disease death rate for males aged 55 to 64 years in 2006 d.Approximate the value of dHfdt for 2004 using the average rate of change from 2004 to 2007. e.Explain what your calculations from parts a and d tell you about comparing heart disease deaths for men and women in 2004. TABLE BHeart Disease Deaths per 100,000 for Females Aged 55 to 64 Years t=year Hf=deathsper100,000 1990 215.7 2000 159.3 2003 141.9 2004 131.5 2007 117.9arrow_forwardReminder Round all answers to two decimal places unless otherwise indicated. Yellowfin Tuna Data were collected comparing the weight W, in pounds, of a yellowfin tuna to its length L, in centimeters. These data are presented in the following table. L=Length W=Weight 70 14.3 80 21.5 90 30.8 100 42.5 110 56.8 120 74.1 130 94.7 140 119 160 179 180 256 a. What is the average rate of change, in weight per centimeter of length, in going from a length of 100 centimeters to a length of 110 centimeters? b. What is the average rate of change, in weight per centimeter of length, in going from 160 to 180 centimeters? c. Judging from the data in the table, does an extra centimeter of length make more difference in weight for a small tuna or for a large tuna? d. Use the average rate of change to estimate the weight of a yellowtuna fish that is 167 centimeters long? e. What is the average rate of change, in length per pound of weight, in going from a weight of 179 pounds to a weight of 256 pounds? f. What would you expect to be the length of a yellow tuna weighing 225 pounds?arrow_forwardReminder Round all answers to two decimal places unless otherwise indicated. Tax Owed The following table shows the income tax T owed in a certain state as a function of the taxable income I, both measured in dollars. I=Taxableincome T=Taxowed 16,000 870 16,200 888 16,400 906 16,600 924 a. Make a table showing, for each of the intervals in the tax table above, the average rate of change in T. b. Describe the general trend in the average rate of change. What does this mean in practical terms? c. Would you expect T to have a limiting value? Be sure to explain your reasoning.arrow_forward
- Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places unless otherwise indicated. Marriage Length In this exercise, we consider data from the Statistical Abstract of the United States on the fraction of women married for the first time in 1960 whose marriage reached a given anniversary number. The data show that the fraction of women who reached their fifth anniversary was 0.928. After that, for each one-year anniversary number, the fraction reaching that number drops by about 2. These data describe constant percentage change, so it is reasonable to model the fraction M as an exponential function of the number n of anniversaries since fifth. a.What is the yearly decay factor for the exponential model? b.Find an exponential model for M as a function of n. c.According to your model, what fraction of women married for the first time in 1960 celebrated their 40th anniversary? Take n=35. Round your answer to three decimal places. The actual fraction is 0.449 or 44.9.arrow_forwardReminder Round all answers to two decimal places unless otherwise indicated. Arterial Blood Flow Medical evidence shows that a small change in the radius of an artery can indicate a large change in blood flow. For example, if one artery has a radius only 5 larger than another, the blood flow rate is 1.22 times as large. Further information is given in the table below. Increase in radius Times greater blood flow rate 5 1.22 10 1.46 15 1.75 20 2.07 a. Use the average rate of change to estimate how many times greater the blood flow rate is in an artery that has a radius 12 larger than another. b. Explain why if the radius is increased by 12 and then we increase the radius of the new artery by 12 again, the total increase in the radius is 25.44. c. Use parts a and b to answer the following question: How many times greater is the blood flow rate in an artery that 25.44 larger in radius than another? d. Answer the question in part c using the average rate of change.arrow_forwardReminder Round all answers to two decimal places unless otherwise indicated. Population Growth The following table shows the population of reindeer on an island as of the given year. date 1945 1950 1955 1960 population 40 165 678 2793 We let t be the number of years since 1945, so that t=0 corresponds to 1945, and we let N=N(t) denote the population size. a. Approximate dNdt for 1955 using the average rate of change from 1955 to 1960, and explain what this number means in practical terms. b. Use your work from part a to estimate the population in 1957. c. The number you calculated in part a is an approximation to the actual rate of change. As you will be asked to show in the next exercise, the reindeer population growth can be closely modeled by an exponential function. With this in mind, du you think your answer in part a is too large or too small? Explain your reasoning.arrow_forward
- ReminderRound all answers to two decimal places unless otherwise indicated. Minimum WageOn July 24, 2008, the federal minimum wage was 6.55perhour. On July 24, 2009, this wage was raised to 7.25perhour. If W(t) denotes the minimum wage, in dollars per hour, as function of time, in years, use the given information to estimate dWdt in 2009.arrow_forwardReminder Round all answers to two decimal places unless otherwise indicated. Sales Income The following table shows the net monthly income N for a real estate agency as a function of the monthly real estate sales s, both measured in dollars. s=Sales N=Netincome 450,000 4000 500,000 5500 550,000 7000 600,000 8500 a. Make a table showing, for each of the intervals in the tax table above, the average rate of change in N. What pattern do you see? b. Use the average rate of change to estimate the net monthly income for monthly real estate sales of 520,000. In light of your answer to part a, how confident are you that your estimate is an accurate representation of the actual income? c. Would you expect N to have a limiting value? Be sure to explain your reasoning.arrow_forwardReminder Round all answers to two decimal places unless otherwise indicated. Averages and Average Rate of Change The following is a partial table of values for f=f(x). x 0 2 4 6 f=f(x) 32.3 36.0 40.1 43.7 a. Estimate the value of f(5) by averaging. b. Find the average rate of change for f between x=4 and x=6.arrow_forward
- Reminder Round all answers to two decimal places unless otherwise indicated. New Construction The following table shows the value B, in billions of dollars, of new construction put in place in the United States during the year t. t=Year B=Value billions of dollars 2000 831.1 2003 891.5 2006 1167.6 2009 935.6 a. Make a table showing, for each of the 3-year periods, the average yearly rate of change in B. b. Explain in practical terms what B(2008) means, and estimate its value. c. Over what period was the growth in value of new construction the greatest? d. According to the table, in what year was the value of new construction the greatest?arrow_forwardReminder Round all answers to two decimal places unless otherwise indicated. Composing Functions Use a formula to express y as a function of t if y=3x2+5x and x=t1.arrow_forwardReminder Round all answers to two decimal places unless otherwise indicated. Giants Ants and Spiders Many science fiction movies feature animals such as ants, spiders, or apes growing to monstrous sizes and threatening defenseless Earthlings. Of course, they are in the end defeated by the hero and heroine. biologists use power function as a rough guide to relate body weight and cross-sectional area of limbs to length or height. Generally, weight is thought to be proportional to the cube of length, whereas the cross-sectional area of limbs is proportional to the square of length. Suppose an ant, having been exposed radiation is enlarged to 500 times its normal length. Such an event can occur only in Hollywood fantasy. Radiation is utterly incapable of causing such a reaction. a.By how much will its weight be increased? b.By how much will the cross-sectional area of its legs be increased? c.Pressure on a limb is weight divided by cross-sectional area. By how much has the pressure on a leg of the giant ant increased? What do you think is likely to happen to this unfortunate ant? Note: The factor by which pressure increases is given by . FactorofincreaseinweightFactorofincreaseinarea)arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Functions and Change: A Modeling Approach to Coll...AlgebraISBN:9781337111348Author:Bruce Crauder, Benny Evans, Alan NoellPublisher:Cengage Learning
Functions and Change: A Modeling Approach to Coll...
Algebra
ISBN:9781337111348
Author:Bruce Crauder, Benny Evans, Alan Noell
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Learn Algebra 6 : Rate of Change; Author: Derek Banas;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dw701mKcJ1k;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY