Inquiry – The Relationship Between a Function and Its Derivative
Activity Goal
In this activity you will discover for yourself the remarkable relationship between the graph of a function and the graph of its derivative.
Key question: If I know what the graph of a function looks like, can I draw the graph of its derivative?
Reminder: What is a Derivative?
The derivative of a function at a given point is the slope of the tangent to the graph at that point.
$$f'(x_0) = \text{slope of the tangent to } f \text{ at } x_0$$
Part A: Free Exploration
Answer the following questions:
1. When the point is on an increasing part of the function (blue graph), what is the sign of the slope?
2. When the point is on a decreasing part of the function, what is the sign of the slope?
3. When the point is at an extremum (maximum or minimum), what is the slope?
Part B: The Big Discovery
Now reveal the derivative graph (the red graph)!
Click the checkbox "Show derivative" in the application above.
Complete the table:
Move the point and complete:
| State of function f | Sign of slope | Graph of f' is... |
|---|---|---|
| f increasing ↗ | ______ | above / below x-axis |
| f decreasing ↘ | ______ | above / below x-axis |
| Extremum | ______ | ______ |
Part C: Summary and Generalization
Rules we discovered:
Part D: Practice
Question 1:
A graph of function f is given. The function is increasing on $$(-\infty, 2)$$ and decreasing on $$(2, \infty)$$.
a) What is the sign of the derivative on $$(-\infty, 2)$$? ______
b) What is the sign of the derivative on $$(2, \infty)$$? ______
c) What is the value of the derivative at $$x=2$$? ______
d) What type of point is $$x=2$$ for function f? ______
Question 2:
Given that $$f'(x) > 0$$ for all $$x < 1$$ and $$f'(x) < 0$$ for all $$x > 1$$.
a) On which intervals is f increasing? ______
b) On which intervals is f decreasing? ______
c) What happens at $$x=1$$? ______
Challenge for advanced students:
If $$f(x) = x^3 - 3x$$, sketch (roughly) the graph of the derivative $$f'(x)$$ without computing!
Hint: find where f is increasing, where it is decreasing, and where the extrema are.