2.1 Conditional Statements
Oct 17th, 2011 by corricelli
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
An online math community
Oct 17th, 2011 by corricelli
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
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Misty Look by Sadish
what is an example of a postulate?
Kayla,
A postulate is a conditional statement that cannot be proved.
This is the first link that showed up on a google search.
http://www.icoachmath.com/math_dictionary/postulate.html
Try searching it yourself – did you come up with any neat links?
Thanks,
Mrs. Corricelli
How do you write the converse of a statement?
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
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
Charlie,
Nice teamwork! Nicely done!
Happy Monday,
Mrs. Corricelli
Sould we bring our textbooks for class tomorrow?
Amalia,
Yes! All week!
Thanks,
Mrs. Corricelli
is the quiz on 2.2 and 2.1?
Mark,
Yup!
Mrs. Corricelli
The online graphing calculator is cool. It is good when I can’t find a calculator at the time.