MathsOnline.net logo

Grade 11 Sequences & Series - Easy

Subject: Sequences & Series · Grade: 11 · Worksheet · Easy · vv2025.11.15

A easy grade 11 worksheet for Sequences & Series.

Worksheet snapshot

Pages
3
Est. time
20 min
Answer key
Included
What you’ll practice
  • Sequences & Series
  • Key concepts: Understanding core sequences & series concepts for Grade 11; Applying sequences & series strategies appropriate to Grade 11
  • Students begin with foundational sequences & series concepts at Grade 11 level, using concrete models and visual supports to build understanding.
  • Apply it: Sequences & Series at the Grade 11 level connects to everyday situations students encounter: problem-solving in daily life, making sense of quantities and relationships, and building mathematical literacy for future learning.
Sample problems
  • For the arithmetic sequence with a₁ = 8 and d = -3, find a_12.
  • For the arithmetic sequence with a₁ = 9 and d = -1, find a_10.
  • For the arithmetic sequence with a₁ = 0 and d = -4, find a_11.

About Sequences & Series

Sequences are ordered lists of numbers following a pattern. Series are sums of sequence terms. Students study arithmetic and geometric sequences and series, including formulas and applications.

Sequences and series model discrete growth, financial calculations (annuities), and patterns. They're fundamental to calculus (limits, infinite series) and many mathematical applications.

Sequences & Series

Analyze and generate arithmetic and geometric sequences; write recursive/explicit formulas; compute partial sums.

This easy level worksheet:

Identify arithmetic vs. geometric; find common difference/ratio; write recursive rules.

Key Concepts

  • Arithmetic vs. geometric patterns
  • Recursive and explicit forms
  • Partial sums and sigma notation

Prerequisite skills

Function representations; exponential/linear basics; algebraic manipulation.

Teaching Strategies

Use tables to detect difference/ratio; connect arithmetic↔linear and geometric↔exponential; derive sum formulas; use sigma notation stepwise.

Assessment ideas

Test sequence pattern recognition and formula use. Include series sum calculations. Ask students to write recursive and explicit formulas. Use real applications (loan payments, population models).

Common Challenges

Mixing up difference vs. ratio; indexing mistakes; misusing sum formulas.

Real-World Applications

Savings plans, depreciation, population growth, tiling/pattern counts.

Extension Activities

Compare recursive vs. explicit efficiency; derive geometric sum in a context; interpret sigma notation in word form.

Parent Tips

Ask your student to classify a sequence quickly (arithmetic or geometric) and justify with difference/ratio.

PrivacyTerms

© 2025 MathsOnline.net. All rights reserved.