The 5-Step Algorithm for Linear Equations
Any linear equation can be solved with these steps:
- Distribute — clear all parentheses
- Combine like terms on each side
- Move variable terms to one side
- Move constant terms to the other side
- Divide by the coefficient
Works for numeric and literal equations alike.
Worked Example: Solving a Numeric Equation
Solve:
- Distribute →
- Collect variables →
- Divide →
✓
Literal Equations: Same Steps, Letters as Constants
Solve
- Collect:
- Factor:
- Divide:
Same process as numeric — just letters.
Applied Literal Equations: Ohm's Law
Formula:
Solve for
This is formula rearrangement — the same skill as literal equations, applied to science.
Guided Practice: Rearranging a Literal Equation
Solve
- Move
-terms left: - Move
-terms right - Factor out
- Divide by the coefficient of
Work through all steps, then advance
Practice Problems: Solving Linear Equations
Solve each:
- Solve
for - Solve
for
Pause and solve all four before advancing
Answers to Linear Equations Practice
The Critical Rule for Inequalities
Equality properties carry over — with one exception:
Multiplying or dividing by a NEGATIVE reverses the inequality symbol.
| Operation | Direction preserved? |
|---|---|
| Add or subtract | Yes |
| Multiply/divide by positive | Yes |
| Multiply/divide by negative | No — REVERSES |
Why the Sign Flips: Visual Proof
Example:
Without reversing:
Worked Example 1: No Flip Needed
Solve:
Step 1: Subtract 5:
Step 2: Multiply by 3 (positive):
Number line: open circle at 9, arrow pointing right
Interval notation:
Worked Example 2: Flip Required
Solve:
Divide both sides by
Number line: closed circle at
Interval notation:
Worked Example 3: Multi-Step Inequality
Solve:
Distribute:
Move terms:
Number line: closed circle at 12, left arrow
Interval:
Check-In: Identify When to Flip
Solve
Work through the solution:
- What operation isolates
? - Does that operation require flipping?
- What is the solution in inequality notation?
Verify: does
Three Representations of Inequality Solutions
| Inequality | Interval | Number Line |
|---|---|---|
| open, right | ||
| closed, left | ||
| open/closed endpoints |
Reading the Solution Set Reference Chart
Key rules: parenthesis open circle
strict inequality; bracket
closed circle
≤ or ≥
Parentheses vs. Brackets: The Rule
- Strict (
or ): endpoint excluded → open circle → parenthesis( - Non-strict (
or ): endpoint included → closed circle → bracket[ - Infinity: always parenthesis — never reached
After a flip: apply the rule to the new symbol.
Guided Practice: Writing Inequality Representations
Express
- Inequality notation: already given —
- Interval notation:
— what goes in the bracket? - Number line: circle at
— open or closed?
Which arrow direction? Left or right?
Practice Problems: Converting Inequality Representations
Convert each to all three forms:
- Solution: all
satisfying
Pause and complete all four before advancing
Answers to Inequality Representation Practice
→ → open circle, right → → closed circle, left → → closed at , open at 3 → → open circle, right
Special Cases: When the Variable Disappears
If the variable drops out, the remaining statement determines the answer:
- False (e.g.,
) → No solution - True (e.g.,
) → All real numbers
This is not an error — it IS the answer.
Special Case: No Solution Worked Example
Solve:
Distribute:
Subtract
This is always false — no value of
Solution: No solution (empty set,
All Real Numbers: Worked Example
Solve:
Distribute:
Subtract
This is always true — every value of
Solution: All real numbers,
Check-In: Recognizing Special Case Equations
Solve
Work through the steps. When the variable disappears:
- Is the remaining statement true or false?
- What is the solution set?
Express the answer using interval notation.
Mixed Practice: Equations and Inequalities
Solve each. Note any special cases.
- Solve
for
Complete all five, then advance
Answers to Mixed Practice Problems
(flip! ÷ ) → (literal) — always true → all real numbers →
Key Takeaways from This Lesson
- Equations: 5-step algorithm — same for numeric and literal
- Literal: treat other letters as constants; factor out the target
- Inequalities: multiply/divide by negative → FLIP
- Non-strict → bracket; strict → parenthesis;
→ parenthesis - Variable drops out: false → no solution; true → all reals
What's Next: Systems of Equations
Next lesson: HSA.REI.C.6 — Systems of Linear Equations
Two equations, two unknowns — solved by graphing, substitution, or elimination.
The single-variable skills you practiced today are essential building blocks for systems.