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Mathematics 14 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

Help:

OpenStudy (anonymous):

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@electrokid can you please help me I am new

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@tcarroll010 could you please help me

OpenStudy (anonymous):

tcarroll010 can you help me

OpenStudy (anonymous):

between 0 and 1: 0.5 between 1 and 2: 1.0 between 2 and 3: 1.0 between 3 and 4: 0.75 between 4 and 5: 0.25 Added up: 3.5 -> divided by 5, because of 5 intervals -> 3.5 / 5 = 0.7

OpenStudy (anonymous):

how did you know what to divide by

OpenStudy (anonymous):

At the end, I divided by 5 because of 5 intervals (look for my 5 "betweens"). Within each interval, I treated each interval individually.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

oh ok gotcha

OpenStudy (anonymous):

See if this helps:|dw:1368650204531:dw|

OpenStudy (anonymous):

It's a crude drawing, but you get the picture. You can just add up and divide by 5 because the "x" interval length is always "1". It's uniform. I made horizontal bars out of the interval averages.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

There's a little more clarity for you, @mathlover6 with that second drawing. It might help conceptually.

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