Feed on
Posts
Comments

Hello,

Please use this section to post questions related to Chapter 2, Section 1 in the Textbook.
HW Due 10/18: p. 75-77: 9-19 odd

Happy If-Then ing,
Mrs. Corricelli

11 Responses to “2.1 Conditional Statements”

  1. kayla says:

    what is an example of a postulate?

  2. Tyler Edwards says:

    How do you write the converse of a statement?

    • corricelli says:

      Tyler,

      Read the book. See page 72, Example 3, entitled, “Writing the Converse of a Conditional Statement”.

      When you are set and feeling good about it (see back of book), then post to help your teammates out! (Or if not, search it online – post about neat links…)

      Thank you,
      Mrs. Corricelli

  3. charlie says:

    Tyler, the converse of a statement is switching the if and the then parts.
    Ex: Statement: If it’s thundering then it’s lightening
    Converse: If it’s lightening, then it’s thundering

    Hope this helps

  4. corricelli says:

    Charlie,
    Nice teamwork! Nicely done!
    Happy Monday,
    Mrs. Corricelli

  5. Amalia Mangiafico says:

    Sould we bring our textbooks for class tomorrow?

  6. Mark Fitzsimmons says:

    is the quiz on 2.2 and 2.1?

  7. Patrick says:

    The online graphing calculator is cool. It is good when I can’t find a calculator at the time.

Leave a Reply

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture.
Anti-Spam Image