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Maths

Arithmetic and Geometric Sequences

Overview

Students move from identifying patterns to applying formal formulae for arithmetic and geometric sequences, including sum formulae, and connect these to real-world applications.

Learning Objective
Students identify, define and work with arithmetic and geometric sequences, derive and apply the nth term and sum formulae for both, and apply them in financial and real-world contexts.

Resources needed

  • Calculator
  • Mini whiteboards

Lesson stages

0 / 7 done
  1. 1 Display several sequences. Students classify as arithmetic (constant difference), geometric (constant ratio), or neither: 3,7,11,15 (arithmetic, d=4); 2,6,18,54 (geometric, r=3); 1,4,9,16 (neither — square numbers); 100,10,1,0.1 (geometric, r=0.1).
  2. 2 nth term: uₙ = a + (n−1)d, where a = first term, d = common difference. Sum of n terms: Sₙ = n/2(2a+(n−1)d) or Sₙ = n/2(a+l) where l = last term. Students find the 20th term and sum of first 20 terms for 5, 8, 11, 14...
  3. 3 nth term: uₙ = arⁿ⁻¹. Sum: Sₙ = a(1−rⁿ)/(1−r) for r≠1. For 3, 6, 12, 24... find u₈ and S₈. Students apply to another geometric sequence with r = 0.5.
  4. 4 For |r| < 1, the sum converges: S∞ = a/(1−r). For 4, 2, 1, 0.5... a=4, r=0.5. S∞ = 4/(1−0.5) = 8. 'Intuitively, the terms get so small they eventually contribute nothing.' Students find S∞ for three convergent series.
  5. 5 Compound interest: deposit £1000 at 4% per year. Year 1: £1040, Year 2: £1081.60... Geometric sequence with a=1000, r=1.04. How much after 10 years? (u₁₀ = 1000 × 1.04⁹ ≈ £1423.) How long until it doubles? (Solve 2000 = 1000 × 1.04ⁿ⁻¹.)
  6. 6 An arithmetic sequence has 3rd term 11 and 7th term 23. Find a and d. Set up simultaneous equations from uₙ formula. Solve. A geometric sequence has u₂ = 6 and u₅ = 48. Find a and r. Students solve both.
  7. 7 Prove that the sum of the first n odd numbers is n². S = 1+3+5+...+(2n−1). Arithmetic series with a=1, d=2: Sₙ = n/2(2+2(n−1)) = n/2(2n) = n². Elegant proof — discuss with students.

Tap a step to mark it as done.

Variations

  • Extend to recurrence relations
  • Investigate Fibonacci as a sequence that is neither arithmetic nor geometric
  • Apply to population growth models
More information

Display: common difference (d), common ratio (r), nth term, series, sum to infinity, convergent, divergent. Notation: uₙ, Sₙ, S∞.

Focus on arithmetic sequences only, using the formula cards. Use the sum formula by listing terms for small n before applying to large n.

Do students correctly identify d and r? Do they substitute into formulae accurately? Do they recognise when S∞ exists (|r| < 1)?

All on mini whiteboards or plain paper. Use a scientific calculator for all computations. No graphing needed for the core work.

Students may confuse sequence (a list of terms) and series (the sum). Reinforce: uₙ is the nth term; Sₙ is the sum of the first n terms.