Practice Reading Monotonicity from a Graph

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📖 Pre-Calculus – Monotonicity | Grade 11 Math

Pre-Calculus: Reading Graphs

Monotonicity – Increasing and Decreasing

🎯 What Is Monotonicity?

Monotonicity describes the behaviour of the function: is it increasing or decreasing?

As we move along the x-axis from left to right, what happens to the y-values?

📈 Increasing Function

As x increases, y also increases

Move right ↗ go up

x y Increasing function

💡 Imagine: climbing a hill — the further you go, the higher you get!

📝 Mathematical definition:

If \(x_1 < x_2\) then \(f(x_1) < f(x_2)\)

📉 Decreasing Function

As x increases, y decreases

Move right ↘ go down

x y Decreasing function

💡 Imagine: going down a slide — the further you go, the lower you get!

📝 Mathematical definition:

If \(x_1 < x_2\) then \(f(x_1) > f(x_2)\)

📊 Intervals of Increase and Decrease

Most functions do not increase or decrease all the time — they have intervals of increase and decrease.

x y -2 0 1 2 Decreasing ↘ Increasing ↗ Decreasing ↘

✏️ In this graph:

Decreasing: on interval \((-\infty, -2)\)

Increasing: on interval \((-2, 1)\)

Decreasing: on interval \((1, \infty)\)

⚠️ Important!

Intervals are written in x-values (not y-values!)

🔍 How to Identify Monotonicity from a Graph?

💡 Trick: imagine walking along the graph from left to right

Going up? 📈

Like climbing a hill

= increasing function

Going down? 📉

Like descending a slope

= decreasing function

➡️ Constant Function

There is a third case: the function neither increases nor decreases — it is constant.

Constant function (horizontal)

The y-value stays the same for all x

✏️ Full Example

-2 -1 1 2 3 minimum Decreasing ↘ Increasing ↗

Graph of \(f(x) = x^2\)

Monotonicity intervals:

Decreasing: on interval \((-\infty, 0)\)

Increasing: on interval \((0, \infty)\)

Transition point: x = 0 (minimum point)

📝 Summary

Increasing 📈 = move right, go up

Decreasing 📉 = move right, go down

Monotonicity intervals written in x-values

Transition points = extrema (in the next page!)

Worked Examples

Example 1

📊 Exercise:

A graph is increasing on the interval \((-\infty, 2)\) and decreasing on the interval \((2, \infty)\). What happens at \(x=2\)?

Show solution
A Local maximum point ✓ Correct
B Local minimum point
C The function is not defined
D Inflection point
Monotonicity analysis

The situation:

Increasing: \((-\infty, 2)\)
Decreasing: \((2, \infty)\)

What happens at \(x=2\)?

Analysis:

1️⃣ Before \(x=2\): increasing ↗

2️⃣ At \(x=2\): transition point

3️⃣ After \(x=2\): decreasing ↘

Conclusion:

Increasing → Decreasing

This is a local maximum point! 🔝

Reasoning:

The function increased up to \(x=2\)
Reached a peak
Then decreased

\(x=2\) is the highest point!

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