Today, I'm including a lab which will help students explore the connection between direct variations, linear equations, and arithmetic sequence so you have a starting point.
Objective: Students will distinguish between Direct Variation, Linear Functions, and Geometric Sequences using graphing software and tables.
Part 1: The Setup (10 Minutes)
Divide the class into three "Reality Groups." Each group is tracking the followers of a new influencer.
Group A (Direct Variation): The account gains exactly 10 followers every hour. They started at 0. ()
Group B (Linear Function): The account gains exactly 10 followers every hour, but they started with 50 followers from a previous account. ()
Group C (Geometric Sequence): The account starts with 2 followers, but the followers double every hour. ()
Part 2: The Digital Lab (20 Minutes)
Students open a graphing tool (like Desmos) or a spreadsheet and create a table for hours 0 through 5.
Group A & B Comparison: Students plot Group A and Group B on the same graph.
The Visualization: They will see two parallel lines.
The Discovery: Group A is "Direct Variation" because it goes through (0,0). Group B is "Linear" but not direct variation because of the y-intercept.
Group A & C Comparison: Students then plot Group C (the Geometric Sequence) as a scatter plot of points.
The Visualization: At hour 1 and 2, the linear growth (Group A) looks "faster." But by hour 4 or 5, the dots for Group C begin to "skyrocket" past the straight line.
The Discovery: Linear growth is about adding (constant slope); Geometric growth is about multiplying (common ratio).
Part 3: The "Deep Dive" Analysis (10 Minutes)
Display the Comparison Chart on the board and have students fill in the missing pieces based on their graphs.
Part 4: The Exit Ticket (5 Minutes)
Ask students to answer one question before leaving:
"If you were trying to save money for a car, would you want your savings to grow like a Linear Function or a Geometric Sequence? Use the word 'slope' or 'ratio' in your answer."
This should get you started with lab for this topic. Let me know what you think, I'd love to hear. Have a great day.






