Standard set
Precalculus
Standards
Showing 131 of 131 standards.
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Number and Quantity
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Algebra
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Functions
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Geometry
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Statistics and Probability
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Number Expressions
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The Complex Number System
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Vector and Matrix Quantities
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Sequences and Series
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Reasoning with Equations and Inequalities
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Parametric Equations
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Conic Sections
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Building Functions
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Interpreting Functions
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Trigonometric Functions
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Graphing Trigonometric Functions
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Applied Trigonometry
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Trigonometric Identities
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Polar Coordinates
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Model with Data
P.N.NE.A
Cluster
Represent, interpret, compare, and simplify number expressions.
P.N.CN.A
Cluster
Perform complex number arithmetic and understand the representation on the complex plane.
P.N.CN.B
Cluster
Use complex numbers in polynomial identities and equations.
P.N.VM.A
Cluster
Represent and model with vector quantities.
P.N.VM.B
Cluster
Understand the graphic representation of vectors and vector arithmetic.
P.N.VM.C
Cluster
Perform operations on matrices and use matrices in applications.
P.A.S.A
Cluster
Understand and use sequences and series.
P.A.REI.A
Cluster
Solve systems of equations and nonlinear inequalities.
P.A.PE.A
Cluster
Describe and use parametric equations.
P.A.C.A
Cluster
Understand the properties of conic sections and model real-world phenomena.
P.F.BF.A
Cluster
Build new functions from existing functions.
P.F.IF.A
Cluster
Analyze functions using different representations.
P.F.TF.A
Cluster
Extend the domain of trigonometric functions using the unit circle.
P.F.GT.A
Cluster
Model periodic phenomena with trigonometric functions.
P.G.AT.A
Cluster
Use trigonometry to solve problems.
P.G.TI.A
Cluster
Apply trigonometric identities to rewrite expressions and solve equations.
P.G.PC.A
Cluster
Use polar coordinates.
P.S.MD.A
Cluster
Model data using regressions equations.
P.N.NE.A.1
Content Standard
Use the laws of exponents and logarithms to expand or collect terms in expressions; simplify expressions or modify them in order to analyze them or compare them.
P.N.NE.A.2
Content Standard
Understand the inverse relationship between exponents and logarithms and use this relationship to solve problems involving logarithms and exponents.
P.N.NE.A.3
Content Standard
Classify real numbers and order real numbers that include transcendental expressions, including roots and fractions of π and e.
P.N.NE.A.4
Content Standard
Simplify complex radical and rational expressions; discuss and display understanding that rational numbers are dense in the real numbers and the integers are not.
P.N.NE.A.5
Content Standard
Understand that rational expressions form a system analogous to the rational numbers, closed under addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division by a nonzero rational expression; add, subtract, multiply, and divide rational expressions.
P.N.CN.A.1
Content Standard
Know there is a complex number i such that i² = –1, and every complex number has the form a + bi with a and b real.
P.N.CN.A.2
Content Standard
Perform arithmetic operations with complex numbers expressing answers in the form a + bi.
P.N.CN.A.3
Content Standard
Find the conjugate of a complex number; use conjugates to find moduli and quotients of complex numbers.
P.N.CN.A.4
Content Standard
Represent complex numbers on the complex plane in rectangular and polar form (including real and imaginary numbers), and explain why the rectangular and polar forms of a given complex number represent the same number.
P.N.CN.A.5
Content Standard
Represent addition, subtraction, multiplication, and conjugation of complex numbers geometrically on the complex plane; use properties of this representation for computation (for example, (–1 + 3i)³ = 8 because (–1 + 3i) has modulus 2 and argument 120°).
P.N.CN.A.6
Content Standard
Calculate the distance between numbers in the complex plane as the modulus of the difference, and the midpoint of a segment as the average of the numbers at its endpoints.
P.N.CN.B.7
Content Standard
Extend polynomial identities to the complex numbers (for example, rewrite x² + 4 as (x + 2i)(x – 2i).
P.N.CN.B.8
Content Standard
Solve quadratic equations with real coefficients that have complex solutions.
P.N.CN.B.9
Content Standard
Know the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra; show that it is true for quadratic polynomials.
P.N.VM.A.1
Content Standard
Recognize vector quantities as having both magnitude and direction. Represent vector quantities by directed line segments, and use appropriate symbols for vectors and their magnitudes (e.g., v, |v|, ||v||, <img src="http://purl.org/ASN/resources/images/D21321918/TN_Math_2023_PN-VM-A-1.gif"/>.
P.N.VM.A.2
Content Standard
Find the components of a vector by subtracting the coordinates of an initial point from the coordinates of a terminal point.
P.N.VM.A.3
Content Standard
Solve problems involving velocity and other quantities that can be represented by vectors.
P.N.VM.B.4
Content Standard
Add and subtract vectors.
P.N.VM.B.5
Content Standard
Multiply a vector by a scalar.
P.N.VM.B.6
Content Standard
Calculate and interpret the dot product of two vectors.
P.N.VM.C.7
Content Standard
Understand that, unlike multiplication of numbers, matrix multiplication for square matrices is not a commutative operation, but still satisfies the associative and distributive properties.
P.N.VM.C.8
Content Standard
Understand that the zero and identity matrices play a role in matrix addition and multiplication similar to the role of 0 and 1 in the real numbers. The determinant of a square matrix is nonzero if and only if the matrix has a multiplicative inverse.
P.N.VM.C.9
Content Standard
Multiply a vector (regarded as a matrix with one column) by a matrix of suitable dimensions to produce another vector. Work with matrices as transformations of vectors.
P.N.VM.C.10
Content Standard
Work with 2 × 2 matrices as transformations of the plane, and interpret the absolute value of the determinant in terms of area.
P.A.S.A.1
Content Standard
Demonstrate an understanding of sequences by representing them recursively and explicitly.
P.A.S.A.2
Content Standard
Use sigma notation to represent a series; expand and collect expressions in both finite and infinite settings.
P.A.S.A.3
Content Standard
Derive and use the formulas for the general term and summation of finite or infinite arithmetic and geometric series, if they exist.
P.A.S.A.4
Content Standard
Understand that series represent the approximation of a number when truncated; estimate truncation error in specific examples.
P.A.S.A.5
Content Standard
Know and apply the Binomial Theorem for the expansion of (x + y)<sup>n</sup> in powers of x and y for a positive integer n, where x and y are any numbers, with coefficients determined, for example, by Pascal's Triangle.
P.A.REI.A.1
Content Standard
Represent a system of linear equations as a single matrix equation in a vector variable.
P.A.REI.A.2
Content Standard
Find the inverse of a matrix if it exists and use it to solve systems of linear equations (using technology for matrices of dimension 3 × 3 or greater).
P.A.REI.A.3
Content Standard
Solve rational and radical equations in one variable, and identify extraneous solutions when they exist.
P.A.REI.A.4
Content Standard
Solve nonlinear inequalities (quadratic, trigonometric, conic, exponential, logarithmic, and rational) by graphing (solutions in interval notation if one-variable), by hand and with appropriate technology.
P.A.REI.A.5
Content Standard
Solve systems of nonlinear inequalities by graphing.
P.A.PE.A.1
Content Standard
Graph curves parametrically (by hand and with appropriate technology).
P.A.PE.A.2
Content Standard
Eliminate parameters by rewriting parametric equations as a single equation.
P.A.C.A.1
Content Standard
Display all of the conic sections as portions of a cone.
P.A.C.A.2
Content Standard
Know and write the equation of a circle of given center and radius using the Pythagorean Theorem.
P.A.C.A.3
Content Standard
Derive the equations of ellipses and hyperbolas given the foci, using the fact that the sum or difference of distances from the foci is constant.
P.A.C.A.4
Content Standard
From an equation in standard form, graph the appropriate conic section: ellipses, hyperbolas, circles, and parabolas. Demonstrate an understanding of the relationship between their standard algebraic form and the graphical characteristics.
P.A.C.A.5
Content Standard
Transform equations of conic sections to convert between general and standard form.
P.F.BF.A.1
Content Standard
Understand how the algebraic properties of an equation transform the geometric properties of its graph (for example, given a function, describe the transformation of the graph resulting from the manipulation of the algebraic properties of the equation such as translations, stretches, reflections, and changes in periodicity and amplitude).
P.F.BF.A.2
Content Standard
Develop an understanding of functions as elements that can be operated upon to get new functions: addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and composition of functions.
P.F.BF.A.3
Content Standard
Compose functions (for example, if T(y) is the temperature in the atmosphere as a function of height, and h(t) is the height of a weather balloon as a function of time, then T(h(t)) is the temperature at the location of the weather balloon as a function of time).
P.F.BF.A.4
Content Standard
Construct the difference quotient for a given function and simplify the resulting expression.
P.F.BF.A.5
Content Standard
Find inverse functions (including exponential, logarithmic, and trigonometric).
P.F.BF.A.6
Content Standard
Explain why the graph of a function and its inverse are reflections of one another over the line y = x.
P.F.IF.A.1
Content Standard
Determine whether a function is even, odd, or neither.
P.F.IF.A.2
Content Standard
Analyze qualities of exponential, polynomial, logarithmic, trigonometric, and rational functions and solve real-world problems that can be modeled with these functions (by hand and with appropriate technology).
P.F.IF.A.3
Content Standard
Identify the real zeros of a function and explain the relationship between the real zeros and the x-intercepts of the graph of a function (exponential, polynomial, logarithmic, trigonometric, and rational).
P.F.IF.A.4
Content Standard
Identify characteristics of graphs based on a set of conditions or on a general equation such as y = ax² + c.
P.F.IF.A.5
Content Standard
Visually locate critical points on the graphs of functions and determine if each critical point is a minimum, a maximum, or point of inflection. Describe intervals where the function is increasing or decreasing and where different types of concavity occur.
P.F.IF.A.6
Content Standard
Graph rational functions, identifying zeros, asymptotes (including slant), and holes (when suitable factorizations are available) and showing end behavior.
P.F.IF.A.7
Content Standard
Recognize that sequences are functions, sometimes defined recursively, whose domain is a subset of the integers (for example, the Fibonacci sequence is defined recursively by f(0) = f(1) = 1, f(n + 1) = f(n) + f(n - 1) for n ≥ 1).
P.F.TF.A.1
Content Standard
Understand radian measure of an angle as the length of the arc on the unit circle subtended by the angle.
P.F.TF.A.2
Content Standard
Convert from radians to degrees and from degrees to radians.
P.F.TF.A.3
Content Standard
Use special triangles to determine geometrically the values of sine, cosine, tangent for π/3, π/4 and π/6, and explain how to use the unit circle to express the values of sine, cosine, and tangent for π–x, π+x, and 2π–x in terms of their values for x, where x is any real number.
P.F.TF.A.4
Content Standard
Use the unit circle to explain symmetry (odd and even) and periodicity of trigonometric functions.
P.F.TF.A.5
Content Standard
Choose trigonometric functions to model periodic phenomena with specified amplitude, frequency, and midline.
P.F.GT.A.1
Content Standard
Interpret transformations of trigonometric functions.
P.F.GT.A.2
Content Standard
Determine the difference made by choice of units for angle measurement when graphing a trigonometric function.
P.F.GT.A.3
Content Standard
Graph the six trigonometric functions and identify characteristics such as period, amplitude, phase shift, and asymptotes.
P.F.GT.A.4
Content Standard
Find values of inverse trigonometric expressions (including compositions), applying appropriate domain and range restrictions.
P.F.GT.A.5
Content Standard
Understand that restricting a trigonometric function to a domain on which it is always increasing or always decreasing allows its inverse to be constructed.
P.F.GT.A.6
Content Standard
Determine the appropriate domain and corresponding range for each of the inverse trigonometric functions.
P.F.GT.A.7
Content Standard
Graph the inverse trigonometric functions and identify their key characteristics.
P.F.GT.A.8
Content Standard
Use inverse functions to solve trigonometric equations that arise in modeling contexts; evaluate the solutions using technology and interpret them in terms of the context.
P.G.AT.A.1
Content Standard
Use the definitions of the six trigonometric ratios as ratios of sides in a right triangle to solve problems about lengths of sides and measures of angles.
P.G.AT.A.2
Content Standard
Derive the formula A = ½ ab sin(C) for the area of a triangle by drawing an auxiliary line from a vertex perpendicular to the opposite side.
P.G.AT.A.3
Content Standard
Derive and apply the formulas for the area of sector of a circle.
P.G.AT.A.4
Content Standard
Calculate the arc length of a circle subtended by a central angle.
P.G.AT.A.5
Content Standard
Prove the Laws of Sines and Cosines and use them to solve problems.
P.G.AT.A.6
Content Standard
Understand and apply the Law of Sines (including the ambiguous case) and the Law of Cosines to find unknown measurements in right and non-right triangles (such as surveying problems and resultant forces).
P.G.TI.A.1
Content Standard
Apply trigonometric identities to verify identities and solve equations. Identities include: Pythagorean, reciprocal, quotient, sum/difference, double-angle, and half-angle.
P.G.TI.A.2
Content Standard
Prove the addition and subtraction formulas for sine, cosine, and tangent and use them to solve problems.
P.G.PC.A.1
Content Standard
Graph functions in polar coordinates.
P.G.PC.A.2
Content Standard
Convert between rectangular and polar coordinates.
P.G.PC.A.3
Content Standard
Represent situations and solve problems involving polar coordinates.
P.S.MD.A.1
Content Standard
Create scatter plots, analyze patterns, and describe relationships for bivariate data (linear, polynomial, trigonometric, or exponential) to model real-world phenomena and to make predictions.
P.S.MD.A.2
Content Standard
Determine a regression equation to model a set of bivariate data. Justify why this equation best fits the data.
P.S.MD.A.3
Content Standard
Use a regression equation, modeling bivariate data, to make predictions. Identify possible considerations regarding the accuracy of predictions when interpolating or extrapolating.
P.N.VM.B.4.a
Add vectors end-to-end, component-wise, and by the parallelogram rule. Understand that the magnitude of a sum of two vectors is typically not the sum of the magnitudes.
P.N.VM.B.4.b
Given two vectors in magnitude and direction form, determine the magnitude and direction of their sum.
P.N.VM.B.4.c
Understand vector subtraction v – w as v + (–w), where –w is the additive inverse of w, with the same magnitude as w and pointing in the opposite direction. Represent vector subtraction graphically by connecting the tips in the appropriate order, and perform vector subtraction component-wise.
P.N.VM.B.5.a
Represent scalar multiplication graphically by scaling vectors and possibly reversing their direction; perform scalar multiplication component-wise (e.g., as c(v<sub>x</sub>, v<sub>y</sub>) = (cv<sub>x</sub>, cv<sub>y</sub>).
P.N.VM.B.5.b
Compute the magnitude of a scalar multiple cv using ||cv|| = |c|v. Compute the direction of cv knowing that when |c|v ≠ 0, the direction of cv is either along v (for c > 0) or against v (for c < 0).
P.A.S.A.3.a
Determine whether a given arithmetic or geometric series converges or diverges.
P.A.S.A.3.b
Find the sum of a given geometric series (both infinite and finite).
P.A.S.A.3.c
Find the sum of a finite arithmetic series.
P.F.BF.A.5.a
Calculate the inverse of a function, f (x), with respect to each of the functional operations; in other words, the additive inverse, − f (x), the multiplicative inverse, 1/f(x), and the inverse with respect to composition, f <sup>−1</sup>(x). Understand the algebraic and graphical implications of each type.
P.F.BF.A.5.b
Verify by composition that one function is the inverse of another.
P.F.BF.A.5.c
Read values of an inverse function from a graph or a table, given that the function has an inverse.
P.F.BF.A.5.d
Recognize a function is invertible if and only if it is one-to-one. Produce an invertible function from a non-invertible function by restricting the domain.
Framework metadata
- Source document
- Tennessee Academic Standards: Mathematics K-4th Year (2023)
- Normalized subject
- Math