Activity No. 1 Direction: You Had Been Studying Mathematics For More Than 10 Years. Based On Your Own Idea, Answer The Following Questions
Activity No. 1 Direction: You Had Been Studying Mathematics For More Than 10 Years. Based On Your Own Idea, Answer The Following Questions
Activity No. 1 Direction: You Had Been Studying Mathematics For More Than 10 Years. Based On Your Own Idea, Answer The Following Questions
Date :
Activity No. 1
Direction: You had been studying mathematics for more than 10 years. Based
on your own idea, answer the following questions.
1. What is mathematics?
1
Activity No. 2
Direction: Write an essay about “Is mathematics discovered or invented?”
Activity No. 3
PATTERNS IN NATURE
Direction: Look around your surroundings and take pictures of naturally
occurring objects that will capture the six different patterns discussed. Post
the pictures in the space below and describe where you observe the patterns.
Picture 1 Patterns observed
__________18____________
We used the rule of the multiples of 3. We can get the multiples of 3 by adding 3 to itself and adding 3 to
the answer and so on. We can also do this by multiplying 3 to numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and so on. For example: 3+3 =
6, 6+3 = 9, 9+3 = 12 or 3x1 = 3, 3x2 = 6, 3x3 = 9.
Activity No. 6
PATTERNS
Direction. Write the next term of the following sequences and explain the rule
use for each sequence.
Sequence Next Rule
Term
1. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, …
3. A, B, D, G, K, …
4.
5. 1, 2, 6, 24, 120, …
6. Z, X, V, T, R, …
8.
10. O, T, T, F, F, …
Activity No. 7
A. Translate the following English phrases/sentences to Mathematical
expressions/sentences.
English Phrases/ Sentences Mathematical Expressions/ Sentences
1. the sum of a number and ten
2. 𝑥𝑦 + 2
𝑎+𝑏
3. 𝑎𝑏
4. 2𝑚 − 3
5. √𝑥𝑦
6. 12(𝑥 + 𝑦) = 20
7. 12𝑥 + 𝑦 = 20
8. 𝑎2 + 𝑏2 = 𝑐2
2(𝑥+𝑦)
9. 𝑥𝑦 ≤ 23
II. Let 𝐴 = {𝑥: 𝑥 is a student of Trinity University of Asia this semester}. Give 2
subsets of 𝐴 using the rule method. Justify/explain your answer.
Subsets of A Justification
III. Let 𝐵 = {𝑥: 𝑥 is even number less than 15}. Give 2 subsets of 𝐴 using the roster
method. Justify/explain your answer.
Subsets of B Justification
Activity No. 9
I. Let 𝑈 = {𝑥|𝑥 is a natural number less than 10}
𝐴 = {𝑥|𝑥 is an even number}
𝐵 = {𝑥|𝑥 is an odd number}
𝐶 = {𝑥|𝑥 is divisible by 3}
𝐷 = {𝑥|𝑥 is divisible by 4}
Determine the following:
1. |𝑃(𝐴)| =
2. 𝑃(𝐶) =
3. 𝐵 ∩ 𝐶 =
4. 𝐶𝑥𝐷 =
5. (𝐵 𝖴 𝐶) − 𝐴′ =
II. Construct a Venn diagram to solve the following problems.
1. When a group of 25 students are surveyed:
6 like ice cream
12 like hot dogs
15 like burger.
One student said he likes all three
3 like ice cream and hot dogs
3 like ice cream and burger.
5 like hotdogs and burger
Questions:
a. How many like hot dogs and burger but not ice cream?
3. Define a relation that will relate the elements of set 𝐵 to elements of set 𝐴.
3. 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, ,
5. 8, 5, 7, 4, 6, ,
7. 0, 3, 8, 15, 24, _,
8. 1 3 9
3, 5 7 , ,
7 , 9 , 11
,
5
2 3 4 5
9. 1 , , , , , ,
2 5 10 17 26
Devise a plan
Look back
2. Chasya invested Php110,000. Part of her money is invested in Chinabank which
yield 8% and the remainder is invested in Metrobank which yield 10%. Her total
annual income from these is Php10,200. Find the amount she has invested in
each bank.
Understand the problem
Devise a plan
Look back
3. A frog is at the bottom of a 21-foot well. Each time the frog leaps, it moves up 3
feet. If the frog has not reached the top of the well, then the frog slides back 1 foot
before it is ready to make another leap. How many leaps will the frog need to
escape the well?
Understand the problem
Devise a plan
Look back
Activity No. 13
LOGIC
Let p, q and r be the following simple statements:
p: Sydney is the capital of
Australia. q: Thirteen is a prime
number.
r: TUA is in Quezon City.
Express each of the following propositions as an English sentence and determine its
truth value.
1. 𝑝 ∨ 𝑞
2. ~𝑝 → 𝑟
3. ~𝑟 ↔ 𝑞
4. (𝑞 𝖠 𝑟) → ~𝑝
5. (𝑝 ∨ ~𝑟) ↔ (𝑞 𝖠 𝑝)
Activity No. 14
LOGIC
I. Construct a truth table of the following and determine if it’s a tautology, a
contradiction, or neither.
1. [(𝑝 𝖠 𝑞) 𝖠 𝑝] → 𝑝
2. (𝑝 ∨ ~𝑞) ↔ (𝑟 → 𝑞)
II. Use the truth table to determine whether the following pairs of statements
are logically equivalent or not.
1. ~(𝑝 ∨ 𝑞) and ~𝑝 𝖠 ~𝑞
2. 𝑝 ∨ (𝑞 𝖠 𝑟) and (𝑝 ∨ 𝑞) 𝖠 (𝑝 ∨ 𝑟)
Activity No. 15
LOGIC
Write the correct conclusion from the given premises and then state the Rule of
Inference used so that the argument will be valid.
5. If 49 is divisible by 7 then 7 is
prime.
If 7 is prime then 8 is even.
10. 12 × 6 = 72
China is the most populated
country in the world.
Activity No. 16
DATA MANAGEMENT
Collect 6 information about your classmates regarding the following variable. At least
20 of them.
ID# Gender GWA Learning Weekly Living Monthly
First Sem. Style Allowance with Expenses
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
Legend:
Gender M – Male GWA E = 1.00 – 1.5 Learning Style
F – Female VG = 1.51 – 2.00 I – Like to study alone
G = 2.01 – 2.75 A – Like to study with friends around
F = 2.76 - 3.00 NC – can study with either way
NI = 3.01 and below
3. What is the average weekly allowance of the students group according to;
3.1 Gender
5. What can you conclude from the results of the data collected?
Activity No. 17
CORRELATION ANALYSIS
I. Find the degree of relationship between weekly allowance and the
monthly expenses of the students from the collected data in
Activity No. 16. You may use any APPS or technology available to compute
for r.
Find the degree of relationship between the weight and the sugar test result
of the patients in Hospital X.
1. Navajo Design
2. Medieval Ornament
4. Chinese Design
5. Nigerian Design
6. Caucasian Design
Frieze Pattern
8. Victorian Design
II. Give the additive and multiplicative inverse of the following integers under the
given modulo.
mod 17 mod 13 mod 23
Integer Additive Multiplicative Additive Multiplicative Additive Multiplicative
Inverse Inverse Inverse Inverse Inverse Inverse
1. 2
2. 5
3. 13
4. 10
5. 15
Name: Section:
Date :
Activity No. 21
Credit card numbers follow certain patterns. A credit card number must have
between 13 and 16 digits. It must start with:
4 for Visa cards
5 for Master cards
To check whether the card is valid or invalid, we use the Luhn check or the mod
10 check, which can be described as follows (for illustration,
consider the card number 4388576018402626):
Step 1. Double every second digit from right to left. If doubling of a digit results in a
two-digit number, add up the two digits to get a single-digit number (like for 12:1+2,
18=1+8).
Step 2. Now add all single-digit numbers from Step 1.
4 + 4 + 8 + 2 + 3 + 1 + 7 + 8 = 37
Step 3. Add all digits in the odd places from right to left in the card number.
6 + 6 + 0 + 8 + 0 + 7 + 8 + 3 = 38
Step 4. Sum the results from Step 2 and Step 3.
37 + 38 = 75
Step 5. If the result from Step 4 is divisible by 10, the card number is valid;
otherwise, it is invalid.
Determine whether the following card is valid or invalid using the Luhn check. Show
your step-by-step solution.
1. 5457 6238 9823 4113
Solution:
Answer:
35
2. 4125 6775 4289 6004
Solution:
Answer:
Date :
Activity No. 22
You and your friend decided to keep your message secret. So the two of you decided
to encrypt your messages the you sent to each other using the cipher
𝑦 = 7𝑥 (mod 26)
using the plaintext below.
A=0 B=1 C=2 D=3 E=4 F=5 G=6 H=7 I=8 J=9
K=10 L=11 M=12 N=13 O=14 P=15 Q=16 R=17 S=18 T=19
U=20 V=21 W=22 X=23 Y=24 Z=25
Cipher text:
37
2. Suppose that she replied to you with the following message (in cipher text):
“TC NCZ KAPVI QZ”
What is she telling you?
Solution:
Plaintext:
Activity No. 23
Mathematics of Voting
I. Students are asked to rank four brands of soup: A, B, C, and D. The votes are
summarized in the following preference table.
Number of
34 30 6 2
Votes
First Choice A B C D
Second Choice B C D B
Third Choice C D B C
Fourth Choice D A A A
Number of
10 8 5
Votes
First Choice H L S
Second Choice S S L
Third Choice L H H
a. For each province, find the standard quota, the upper quota and the lower
quota. Give your answers in a table.
Province Balite Mabolo Molave Niugan Bancal Total
Population 183,000 57,000 274,000 74,000 105,000 693,000
Standard
Quota
Upper
Quota
Lower
Quota
b. Use Hamilton’s method to apportion the 80 council members.
Home 30 27 18 12
Place A 30 42 22 37
Place B 27 42 18 31
Place C 18 22 18 25
Place D 12 37 31 25
Activity No. 26
the numbers 1-9 into a grid consisting of 9 squares subdivided into a further 9 smaller squares in such a way that every numbe
2.