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M95. Mod 2. Sec. 5.6 A: Factoring Trinomials: page 1 I. Review FOIL: multiplying to get a trinomial, changing from a product to a sum Ex. 1: Multiply: x 4 x 5 = a) What are the factors of ex. 1? b) What are the terms of the answer? Ex. 2: Multiply: x 1 x 4 = a) What are the factors of ex 2? b) What are the terms of the answer? II. Factoring by Trial-and-Error or Guess-and-Check: Factoring is undistributing. It is writing the sum as a product. A. When the coefficient on the squared term is 1: Factor the following: Ex. 3: x 2 3 x 2 Notice: The sign on the last term of the trinomial is positive—the signs in the binomials must be the same. Ex. 4: x 2 8 x 15 Notice: The sign on the last term of the trinomial is positive—the signs in the binomials must be the same. M95, Sec. 5.6a, pg.2 Ex. 5: y 2 2y 15 Notice: The sign on the last term of the trinomial is negative—the signs in the binomials must be different. Ex. 6: x 2 2xy 8y 2 Notice: The sign on the last term of the trinomial is negative—the signs in the binomials must be different. Ex. 7: a2 6a 9 Ex. 8: x 8 x 15 2 Ex. 9: x 10 x 24 2 Ex. 10: a 8a 16 2 M95, Sec. 5.6a, pg.3 B. When the coefficient on the squared term is NOT 1: Look for a GCF first. Ex. 11: 5y 2 5y 30 Ex. 12: 2z2 12z 16 Ex. 13: 3m4 18m3 15m2 Ex. 14: 6 x 24 x 30 x 3 2 Ex. 15: 3a 6a 6 2 Ex. 16: M95, Sec. 5.6a, pg.4 III. When the coefficient on the squared term is not 1, and there is no common factor, try guess and check or factoring by grouping. Ex. 16: 2y 2 5y 3 Ex. 17: 3 p2 13p 30 Ex. 18: 6 x 2 x 12 Ex. 19: 4z 2 17z 4 Ex. 20: 3 x 13 x 4 2 Ex. 21: 5 x 13 x 6 2 M95. Mod 2. Sec. 5.6B: More Factoring of Trinomials: page 1 I. When the coefficient on the squared term is not 1, and there is no common factor, try guess and check. Use the sign clues from the previous lesson to make good educated guesses. Ex. 1: Ex. 2: Ex. 3: Ex. 4: Ex. 5: 12x 11x 2 2 Ex. 6: 14 x x 3 2 M95, Sec. 5.6B pg 2 Ex. 7: 6 x 13 x 8 2 II. When do we know to quit trying to factor a polynomial? In the case of quadratic trinomials, when the discriminant is a perfect square, it can be factored with integers. When a polynomial cannot be factored, we call it prime. d = III. The "AC" or "First-Last" method: Ex. 8: 8 x 40 xy 50y 2 Ex. 9: Ex.10: 2 M95, Sec. 5.6B pg 3 IV. Reviewing Patterns: Ex. 11: Multiply: Ex. 12: Factor: Ex. 13: Multiply: Ex. 14: Factor: Hint: rewrite 27 as M95, Sec. 5.6B pg 4 Ex. 15: Multiply: Ex. 16: Factor: Ex. 17: Factor: Ex. 18: Factor: Ex. 19: Factor: (Check with multiplication) M95. Mod 2. Sec. 5.7: Factoring by Special Products I. Review: Factor the following Ex. 1: 4z 2 17z 4 Ex. 2: 4 x 2 32x 60 Ex. 3: 24z3 8z 2 80z Ex. 4: 3 5 x 2x 2 II. The Difference of Two Squares (The Difference of Squares): A. Multiply: a b a b (the sum and difference of the same terms) B. a2 b2 1. 2. 3. 4. Binomial Each term is a perfect square It is the difference (subtraction) It will factor into: a b a b 5. Note: the sum of two squares is prime! i.e. a b is prime. 2 C. Factor the following: Ex. 5: y 2 144 2 Ex. 6: 16 x 2 100 Ex. 7: 9 x 2 4y 2 M95, Sec. 5.7, pg 2 Ex. 8: 64z 4 49z 2 Ex. 9: t 4 9 Ex. 10: x 4 81t 4 Ex. 11: 4 x 3 8 x 2 x 2 III. Perfect Square Trinomials: (comes from squaring a binomial) A. Multiply: 3 x 2y 2 B. Perfect Square Trinomials: 1. It is a trinomial 2. The first and last terms are perfect squares (and both positive!) 3. The middle term is twice the product of the original terms in the binomial 4. It will be of the form: A2 2AB B2 or A2 2AB B 2 5. It will factor into: C. Factor the following: Ex. 12: 4z 2 4z 1 A B 2 or A B 2 Ex. 13: 9y 2 6y 4 M95, Sec. 5.7, pg 3 Ex. 14: x 2 2x 1 Ex. 15: x 2 20 x 100 Ex. 16: 9z3 6z 2 z Ex. 17: 50 x 2 60 x 18 Ex. 18: 64 x 2 16 x 1 Ex. 19: x 2 2x 1 IV. A Factoring Strategy: 1. Look for a common factor (gcf). If there is one, factor it out first. 2. Is the polynomial a binomial (two terms)? If so, is it the difference of two squares? a2 b2 a b a b . Remember that the sum of two squares is prime. 3. Is the polynomial a trinomial (three terms)? 2 a. Is it a perfect square? A2 2 AB B 2 A B b. If it is not a perfect square, use trial-and-error. 4. Does the polynomial contain four or more terms? Try grouping. 5. Is the polynomial completely factored? Check each factor. V. More Practice : Factor completely. Ex. 20: 4 x 2 22x 10 Ex. 21: 75a2 48 Ex. 22: 10 x 3 90x 2 200x Ex. 23: n3 2n 2 n 2 Ex. 24: 2r 3 12r 2t 18rt 2 Ex. 25: 4r 4 t 6 Ex. 26: 24 x 2 5 x Ex. 27: 4a2 27a 18 Ex. 28: 25 x 2 x 36 Ex. 29: 2x 2 11x 20 Ex. 30: x 2 25 Ex. 31: Ex. 32: M95, Sec. 5.7, pg 4