Description
The Mathsmith
Notes Sinusoidal Transformations
This is probably the best thing I've created, my students love it and it really helps organize all of the information!!
I have a personal preference for the chart however a few students liked the web more (its all the same information).
*I refer to -sin(x) as a VERTICAL reflection across the x-axis. I know that currently this is considered a horizontal reflection but I'm working on a paper to make an argument for why this shouldn't be. In the art world and any other non-math world it would be considered a vertical flip.
Notes Sinusoidal Transformations
This is probably the best thing I've created, my students love it and it really helps organize all of the information!!
I have a personal preference for the chart however a few students liked the web more (its all the same information).
*I refer to -sin(x) as a VERTICAL reflection across the x-axis. I know that currently this is considered a horizontal reflection but I'm working on a paper to make an argument for why this shouldn't be. In the art world and any other non-math world it would be considered a vertical flip.
Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.
Highlights
Digital downloads
Grades
9th - 12th, Higher Education
Subjects
Pages
2
Description
The Mathsmith
Notes Sinusoidal Transformations
This is probably the best thing I've created, my students love it and it really helps organize all of the information!!
I have a personal preference for the chart however a few students liked the web more (its all the same information).
*I refer to -sin(x) as a VERTICAL reflection across the x-axis. I know that currently this is considered a horizontal reflection but I'm working on a paper to make an argument for why this shouldn't be. In the art world and any other non-math world it would be considered a vertical flip.
Notes Sinusoidal Transformations
This is probably the best thing I've created, my students love it and it really helps organize all of the information!!
I have a personal preference for the chart however a few students liked the web more (its all the same information).
*I refer to -sin(x) as a VERTICAL reflection across the x-axis. I know that currently this is considered a horizontal reflection but I'm working on a paper to make an argument for why this shouldn't be. In the art world and any other non-math world it would be considered a vertical flip.
Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.
Reviews
All verified TPT purchases
Really nice and clear.
Questions & Answers
Loading
Loading


