
Adding, Subtracting, Multiplying, Dividing Polynomials
Authored by Anthony Clark
Mathematics
11th Grade
CCSS covered
Used 4+ times

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15 questions
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1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
2x2-13x-7
2x2+13x+7
-2x2-13x-7
-2x2+13x-7
Tags
CCSS.HSA.APR.A.1
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
-10x2-9
10x2-9
-5x2-2x-6
-5x2-4x-9
Tags
CCSS.HSA.APR.A.1
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Divide using synthetic division
(2x³ + 4x² - 5) by (x + 3).
2x² + 2x - 4 R(-12)
2x² - 2x + 6 R(-23)
2x² - 2x + 8 R(-20)
2x² - 4x + 1 R0
Tags
CCSS.HSA.APR.D.6
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Find the Quotient
(2x3 - 5x2 - 3x + 7) / (x - 2)
2x2- 9x +15
2x2 - x - 5
2x2 - 9x - 21
2x2 + x + 5
Tags
CCSS.HSA.APR.D.6
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
(6b3 + 6 - b4) - (8b3 - 6b4 + 2)
4b4 - 2b3 + 7
5b4 - 2b3 + 4
b4 - 2b3 + 7
5b4 - 2b3 + 7
Tags
CCSS.HSA.APR.A.1
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
If you were dividing x6 + 4x3 + 2, how many 0's would you need when setting up the top row of your synthetic division?
0
2
4
6
Tags
CCSS.HSA.APR.D.6
7.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
1 min • 1 pt
Is (x-2) a factor of f(x)= x3-8x2+14x-4?
Yes, (x-2) is a factor. There is a remainder.
No, (x-2) is not a factor. The remainder is zero.
Yes, (x-2) is a factor. The remainder is zero.
No, (x-2) is not a factor. There is a remainder.
Tags
CCSS.HSA.APR.B.2
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