Grade: 8 Subject: Math Unit: Irrational Numbers Lesson: 5 of 6 SAT: Algebra ACT: Math

Common Mistakes

Overview

Recognize and avoid common errors when working with irrational numbers, square roots, and the real number system. Understanding these pitfalls will improve your accuracy.

Practice Problems

Question 1: A student says sqrt(9 + 16) = sqrt(9) + sqrt(16) = 3 + 4 = 7. What's the error?

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Answer: You cannot distribute a square root over addition

Correct: sqrt(9 + 16) = sqrt(25) = 5, not 7. The property sqrt(a) + sqrt(b) does NOT equal sqrt(a + b).

Question 2: A student claims 0.333... (repeating) is irrational because the decimal never ends. Is this correct?

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Answer: No - 0.333... is rational

Repeating decimals are always rational. 0.333... = 1/3. Only non-repeating, non-terminating decimals are irrational.

Question 3: A student simplifies sqrt(50) as sqrt(25) x sqrt(2) = 25sqrt(2). Find the error.

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Answer: Should take the square root of 25

sqrt(50) = sqrt(25 x 2) = sqrt(25) x sqrt(2) = 5sqrt(2), not 25sqrt(2).

Question 4: A student says pi = 3.14, so pi is rational. What's wrong with this reasoning?

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Answer: 3.14 is just an approximation, not the exact value

Pi is irrational - it cannot be exactly expressed as a fraction or terminating/repeating decimal. 3.14 is a rounded approximation.

Question 5: A student writes sqrt(x^2) = x. When is this incorrect?

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Answer: When x is negative

sqrt(x^2) = |x| (absolute value), not x. For example, sqrt((-3)^2) = sqrt(9) = 3, not -3.

Question 6: A student estimates sqrt(150) is between 10 and 20 because 10^2 = 100 and 20^2 = 400. Can they give a better estimate?

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Answer: Yes - sqrt(150) is between 12 and 13

12^2 = 144 and 13^2 = 169, so 12 < sqrt(150) < 13. The estimate can be narrowed to about 12.2.

Question 7: A student says all integers are rational numbers. Is this correct?

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Answer: Yes, this is correct

Every integer n can be written as n/1, which is a ratio of integers. So all integers are rational.

Question 8: A student adds 3sqrt(2) + 4sqrt(3) and gets 7sqrt(5). What's wrong?

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Answer: Cannot combine unlike radicals

3sqrt(2) + 4sqrt(3) cannot be simplified because the radicands (2 and 3) are different. The answer stays as 3sqrt(2) + 4sqrt(3).

Question 9: A student says the product of two irrational numbers is always irrational. Give a counterexample.

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Answer: sqrt(2) x sqrt(2) = 2 (rational)

The product of two irrationals can be rational. Another example: sqrt(8) x sqrt(2) = sqrt(16) = 4.

Question 10: A student concludes sqrt(4/9) = sqrt(4)/sqrt(9) = 2/3. Is this correct?

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Answer: Yes, this is correct

Unlike addition, you CAN distribute square roots over division: sqrt(a/b) = sqrt(a)/sqrt(b). So sqrt(4/9) = 2/3.