This is my first go at teaching either class, so I'm sticking pretty close to what the books say. I figure the authors are the experts on both the subject and the audience, so it's a good starting point. Both books teach the Chain Rule quite differently, so I was excited to try both and compare and contrast.
Unfortunately, one thing I found across the board was that many of my students don't have a firm grasp on composition functions. Sure, they can compute fog, but ask them to go the other way--to decompose a function--and all of a sudden at least half of them look at you like you've asked them to please go swim across the Atlantic Ocean. It was a frustrating moment as a teacher because I couldn't find a way to explain decompositions without using the typical vague words like "inside" and "outside" functions. I tried saying that the "inside" function is what has parenthesis around it, or the expression you could put parenthesis around without changing anything. Yeah...that works for functions like
And
But when we got to
they told me the inside function was e.
Not e to some power. Just e.
FAIL.
On me, not my students.
Note to self: learn how to teach the decomposition of functions.
The Chain Rule via Leibniz notation did go a bit better. We talked about how if a company that produces video games wants to know how much it is making per minute, it could take how much it makes per game sold and multiply that by how many games it sells per minute:
Similarly, if y=f(u) changes 1/2 as fast as u, and u=g(x) changes 3 times as fast as x, then we can conclude that y changes 1/2 times 3, or 1.5, times as fast as x:
Another thing I tried that I stole from the Business Calc book was beginning with a "guess" for the derivative of a function such as
For the "guess" for f'(x) we applied the Power Rule to the "inside" function and got
I thought this would be a great "AH-HA!" moment. Alas. It was not.
I just got a bunch of, "So, what was the guess for?" "What's the final answer?" "How would you enter that into MyMathLab?"
Sigh.
I think the "guess" thing really could have been powerful. I just need to ponder how to present it better.
So, that's the Chain Rule. Some things worked. Some didn't. Most didn't. But this is one of the amazing parts of teaching mathematics--learning how others learn math.
You always want to substitute an expression that involves 'x' (or whatever variable you're differentiating with respect to), so with e^(5x-1), it can't be e.
ReplyDeleteThe expression you're substituting should be thought of as an argument to some function. It's just a matter of identifying that function. If you can identify trigonometric functions, power functions, the exponential function and so on, it should be easy.
I totally agree--it should be easy. Unfortunately, many of my students still struggle with recognizing composition functions as such. For example, when asked what rule to use to differentiate the function f(x)=ln(3x+5), the response was the Product Rule. Similarly, for expressions such as x+xcos(2x), students have asked why we can't factor out the x in the argument. It seems (to me) that they think trig functions and log functions can be treated as constants.
ReplyDeleteI really like the idea of presenting the "inside" function as an expression that involves the independent variable. I am certainly going to try it! Many thanks!
Damn... that's hard to believe since I study further maths (basically an extra subject in the UK so we can do even more maths!) and everyone just "gets it" :p. It could be that they are seeing cos as a constant, or maybe they're thinking there's a trig identity they can use. As for the product rule, it might help to tell them that you need two expressions that are being multiplied and both should involve the independent variable. In any case, it doesn't hurt to quickly go over functions with them.
DeleteEven if they're still a little unsure, practice makes perfect.
I know...it was hard for me to believe, too. I assumed students in calculus would understand that cos is meaningless without an argument or that ln doesn't mean a thing by itself. Just goes to show--never assume!
DeleteKarnataka Secondary Education Examination Board (KSEEB) Ready to Prepare new Syllabus for Karnataka 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th Class in Kannada, English Medium All Subject, KSEEB Every Year Conducted 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th Class Final Exam Month of March for 10th Exam After Conducted High Schools Exam in Month of April, Karnataka 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th Class Exam date Sheet 2023 available at Official Website, KSEEB 6th Class Syllabus KSEEB Regulates and Supervises the System of Secondary Education in Karnataka State, It Executes and Governs Various Activities that include Devising of Courses of Study, Prescribing Syllabus.
ReplyDelete