logo

Question detail

Exam-style 2 - F6 Use logarithmic graphs to estimate parameters in relationships of the form y = ax^n and y = kb^x, given data for x and y. - Pure Mathematics

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

Question

Type

exam_style

Style

Topic

Pure Mathematics

Exam-style question

Try this first

F6: A student gives an answer to a exponentials and logarithms problem without explaining the method. Describe what working should be shown for use logarithmic graphs to estimate parameters in relationships… and explain one common error to avoid.

Model answer

What a good answer should say

  • The working should make the mathematical structure visible before any final answer is stated.
  • For use logarithmic graphs to estimate parameters in relationships…, the student should write the chosen rule or definition, apply it step by step, and explain why each transformation is valid.
  • A common error is that logarithm laws apply to products and powers, not arbitrary sums.
  • The final line should connect the result back to the original problem, including any exact form, interval, units, modelling assumption or restriction required by the objective.

This answer is tied to the objective: F6 Use logarithmic graphs to estimate parameters in relationships of the form y = ax^n and y = kb^x, given data for x and y..

Explanation

Why this works

Use the explanation to connect the worked answer back to F6 Use logarithmic graphs to estimate parameters in relationships of the form y = ax^n and y = kb^x, given data for x and y..

This question is anchored to F6 because it tests method selection and reasoning for use logarithmic graphs to estimate parameters in relationships…, not a disconnected routine skill. It rewards precise notation, visible working and a final conclusion that follows from the stated pure mathematics method.

Maths method check

  • Topic focus: Pure Mathematics.
  • Question style: exam_style.
  • Reasoning demand: recall.
  • Check the operation, notation, units, and final answer form against the question before moving on.

Common mistake

No common mistake is linked to this question yet.

Related flashcards

No flashcards are published for this page yet.

Related practice questions

No questions are published for this page yet.