Grade: Grade 11 Subject: Mathematics Unit: Advanced Trigonometry Lesson: 5 of 6 SAT: Geometry+Trigonometry ACT: Math

Common Mistakes

Learn to recognize and avoid the most frequent errors students make in trigonometry, from calculator mishaps to conceptual misunderstandings.

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Understanding common mistakes helps you avoid them on tests and strengthens your conceptual foundation. This lesson covers the most frequent trigonometry errors and how to prevent them.

Category 1: Calculator and Mode Errors

Mistake: Wrong Angle Mode (Degrees vs. Radians)

The Problem: Your calculator is in degree mode when the problem uses radians, or vice versa.

Example: Calculating sin(pi) and getting 0.0548... instead of 0.

The Fix: Always check your calculator mode before starting. If working with pi, you need radian mode. If working with degree symbols (like 45 degrees), you need degree mode.

Quick Check: sin(30 degrees) should equal 0.5 in degree mode. sin(pi/6) should equal 0.5 in radian mode.

Mistake: Inverse Function Confusion

The Problem: Confusing sin^(-1)(x) (arcsin) with 1/sin(x) (cosecant).

Example: Thinking sin^(-1)(0.5) means 1/sin(0.5).

The Fix: Remember that sin^(-1) is the inverse function (arcsin), which gives you an angle. csc(x) = 1/sin(x) is the reciprocal function.

Category 2: Quadrant and Sign Errors

Mistake: Forgetting Quadrant Signs

The Problem: Finding the correct magnitude but wrong sign for a trig value.

Example: Finding sin(210 degrees) = 1/2 instead of -1/2.

The Fix: Use "All Students Take Calculus" (ASTC) to remember which functions are positive in each quadrant:

  • Quadrant I: All positive
  • Quadrant II: Sine positive
  • Quadrant III: Tangent positive
  • Quadrant IV: Cosine positive

Mistake: Reference Angle Errors

The Problem: Calculating the wrong reference angle.

Example: For 240 degrees, using 60 degrees reference angle correctly, but for 150 degrees, using 50 degrees instead of 30 degrees.

The Fix: Reference angle formulas:

  • QI: theta
  • QII: 180 - theta (or pi - theta)
  • QIII: theta - 180 (or theta - pi)
  • QIV: 360 - theta (or 2pi - theta)

Category 3: Identity Misapplication

Mistake: Incorrect Identity Formulas

The Problem: Misremembering or misapplying trigonometric identities.

Common Errors:

  • Writing sin(A + B) = sin(A) + sin(B) (WRONG!)
  • Writing cos^2(x) = cos(x^2) (WRONG!)
  • Confusing sin^2(x) + cos^2(x) = 1 with tan^2(x) + cot^2(x) = 1 (the latter is wrong)

The Fix: Memorize the correct identities:

  • sin(A + B) = sin(A)cos(B) + cos(A)sin(B)
  • cos(A + B) = cos(A)cos(B) - sin(A)sin(B)
  • sin^2(x) means (sin(x))^2

Mistake: Cancellation Errors

The Problem: Incorrectly canceling terms in fractions.

Example: Simplifying (sin(x) + cos(x))/sin(x) as 1 + cos(x) instead of 1 + cot(x).

The Fix: You can only cancel factors, not terms. Split the fraction first: (sin(x) + cos(x))/sin(x) = sin(x)/sin(x) + cos(x)/sin(x) = 1 + cot(x).

Category 4: Unit Circle Errors

Mistake: Mixing Up Coordinates

The Problem: Confusing which coordinate is cosine and which is sine.

Example: Saying sin(0) = 1 and cos(0) = 0.

The Fix: Remember: on the unit circle, the point is (cos(theta), sin(theta)). Cosine is always the x-coordinate (horizontal), sine is always the y-coordinate (vertical). At theta = 0, the point is (1, 0), so cos(0) = 1 and sin(0) = 0.

Mistake: Confusing Special Angle Values

The Problem: Mixing up the values for 30, 45, and 60 degree angles.

The Fix: Create a memory device. Notice that for sine, as the angle increases (30, 45, 60), the values increase: 1/2, sqrt(2)/2, sqrt(3)/2. For cosine, it's the reverse.

Examples

Identify the mistake in each problem and correct it.

Example 1: Find the Error

Student Work: Find cos(5pi/4).

5pi/4 is in Quadrant III. Reference angle is pi/4.

cos(pi/4) = sqrt(2)/2.

Answer: sqrt(2)/2

Error: The student forgot to apply the quadrant sign. In Quadrant III, cosine is negative.

Correct Answer: cos(5pi/4) = -sqrt(2)/2

Example 2: Find the Error

Student Work: Simplify sin(2x)/sin(x).

Cancel sin from top and bottom: 2x/x = 2

Answer: 2

Error: You cannot cancel sin as if it were a factor. sin(2x) is not equal to 2 * sin(x).

Correct Approach: Use the double angle identity: sin(2x) = 2sin(x)cos(x).

So sin(2x)/sin(x) = 2sin(x)cos(x)/sin(x) = 2cos(x)

Example 3: Find the Error

Student Work: If sin(theta) = 3/5, find cos(theta).

Using sin^2 + cos^2 = 1:

(3/5)^2 + cos^2 = 1

cos^2 = 1 - 9/25 = 16/25

cos = 4/5

Error: The student didn't consider that cos could be negative. Without knowing the quadrant, there are two possible answers.

Correct Answer: cos(theta) = +/- 4/5 (need quadrant information to determine the sign)

Practice

For each problem, identify whether there is an error. If there is, explain the mistake and provide the correct answer.

Problem 1: A student says tan(90 degrees) = 1 because "tangent at 45 degrees is 1, and 90 is twice 45."

Show Answer

Error: tan(90 degrees) is undefined because cos(90 degrees) = 0, and tan = sin/cos would involve division by zero. Trig functions are not linear.

Problem 2: sin(7pi/6) = sin(pi/6) = 1/2

Show Answer

Error: 7pi/6 is in Quadrant III where sine is negative. Correct answer: sin(7pi/6) = -1/2

Problem 3: cos(60 degrees) = sqrt(3)/2

Show Answer

Error: The values are swapped. cos(60 degrees) = 1/2. It's sin(60 degrees) that equals sqrt(3)/2.

Problem 4: To find sin^(-1)(0.5), I calculated 1/sin(0.5) = 2.086

Show Answer

Error: sin^(-1) means the inverse function (arcsin), not the reciprocal. sin^(-1)(0.5) = 30 degrees or pi/6 radians.

Problem 5: sec(pi/3) = 1/sin(pi/3) = 2/sqrt(3)

Show Answer

Error: Secant is the reciprocal of cosine, not sine. sec(pi/3) = 1/cos(pi/3) = 1/(1/2) = 2

Problem 6: (sin(x))^2 + (cos(x))^2 = 1, so sin(x) + cos(x) = 1

Show Answer

Error: You cannot take the square root of both sides of a sum like this. sqrt(a^2 + b^2) is not equal to a + b. The original identity is correct, but the conclusion is wrong.

Problem 7: The reference angle for 315 degrees is 315 - 270 = 45 degrees

Show Answer

Correct! 315 degrees is in Quadrant IV, so the reference angle is 360 - 315 = 45 degrees. (The student's method also works since 315 degrees is 45 degrees past the negative x-axis going clockwise.)

Problem 8: cot(x) = tan(1/x)

Show Answer

Error: Cotangent is 1/tan(x) or cos(x)/sin(x), not tan(1/x). These are completely different expressions.

Problem 9: sin(-theta) = sin(theta) because squaring makes negatives positive

Show Answer

Error: Sine is an odd function, meaning sin(-theta) = -sin(theta). You might be thinking of sin^2(-theta) = sin^2(theta), which is true.

Problem 10: In the equation y = 3sin(2x), the amplitude is 3 and the period is 2pi.

Show Answer

Error: The amplitude is correct (3), but the period is 2pi/2 = pi, not 2pi. The coefficient of x affects the period as period = 2pi/B where B is that coefficient.

Problem 11: cos(pi/2) = 1 because at pi/2 the point on the unit circle is at the top.

Show Answer

Error: At pi/2, the point is (0, 1). Since cosine is the x-coordinate, cos(pi/2) = 0. It's sin(pi/2) that equals 1.

Problem 12: If tan(theta) = 3/4 in Quadrant I, then sin(theta) = 3 and cos(theta) = 4.

Show Answer

Error: Sine and cosine values must be between -1 and 1. If tan = 3/4, we need to find the hypotenuse: sqrt(3^2 + 4^2) = 5. So sin = 3/5 and cos = 4/5.

Check Your Understanding

Test yourself on avoiding common mistakes.

Question 1: What should you always check on your calculator before solving trig problems?

Question 2: In which quadrants is tangent positive?

Question 3: What is the difference between sin^(-1)(x) and csc(x)?

Question 4: Why is sin(A + B) not equal to sin(A) + sin(B)?

Show Answers
  1. Check whether the calculator is in degree mode or radian mode.
  2. Quadrants I and III (where sine and cosine have the same sign)
  3. sin^(-1)(x) is the inverse sine function (arcsin) which returns an angle. csc(x) is the reciprocal, equal to 1/sin(x).
  4. Trigonometric functions are not linear/distributive. The correct formula is sin(A + B) = sin(A)cos(B) + cos(A)sin(B).

Next Steps

  • Create a personal "error log" to track mistakes you make
  • Review problems you got wrong and identify the error type
  • Take the Unit Quiz to test your overall understanding
  • Double-check your calculator mode before every problem set