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Number and Shape Patterns

Understanding Number and Shape Patterns

Patterns are everywhere in math! A pattern is a sequence of numbers or shapes that follows a specific rule. If you know the rule, you can easily figure out what comes next, or even create your own patterns.

Repeating Shape Patterns

Shape patterns often repeat in a specific order. To find what comes next, look for the "core" of the pattern—the exact group of shapes that repeats over and over.

Example: Look at this pattern: Triangle, Square, Circle, Triangle, Square, Circle...

  • The Core: The repeating group is "Triangle, Square, Circle".
  • What comes next? After the second Circle, the pattern starts over. The next two shapes will be a Triangle, then a Square.

Growing Number Patterns

Number patterns usually grow or shrink by following a math rule. This rule might involve adding, subtracting, multiplying, or dividing.

Example: Finding the rule Look at the sequence: 2,6,18,54,2, 6, 18, 54, \dots How do we get from one number to the next?

  • 2+4=62 + 4 = 6, but 6+46 + 4 does not equal 1818. So, addition isn't the rule.
  • Let's try multiplication: 2×3=62 \times 3 = 6.
  • Does it work for the next numbers? 6×3=186 \times 3 = 18, and 18×3=5418 \times 3 = 54.
  • The Rule: Multiply by 33.

Generating a Pattern from a Rule

Sometimes you are given a starting number and a rule, and you need to build the pattern yourself.

Example: Start with 33, add 55 each time. Let's find the first 5 numbers in this pattern:

  1. Start: 33
  2. Add 55: 3+5=83 + 5 = 8
  3. Add 55: 8+5=138 + 5 = 13
  4. Add 55: 13+5=1813 + 5 = 18
  5. Add 55: 18+5=2318 + 5 = 23

The pattern is: 3,8,13,18,233, 8, 13, 18, 23.

A Quick Tip: When trying to find a rule for a number pattern, always test your rule on at least three numbers in the sequence to make sure it works every time!