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This problem provides a context for genuine discovery and student directed research/investigation. It is an ideal situation for students to work out how to use ICT to speed up the calculations and support them in their quest to rediscover Litov's Theorem.
"I found this problem called Litov's Mean Value Theorem. I'm hoping we can work out what the theorem is. We can start with any two numbers, say $8$ and $2$. These are the start of a sequence. The rule is that the next number in the sequence is the average of the last two numbers. So what comes next? Why? And then what?...
Invite students to choose their own pair of starting numbers, to calculate the sequence and find its limit. Students could use calculators for this activity. Giving students free choice can result in a lot of information being collected in a short space of time. While this is going on and the results are appearing on the blackboard, ask some students to think about how these calculations could be
done on a spreadsheet.
Bring the class together and ask for observations, comments, suggestions and predictions. Demonstrate the use of a spreadsheet for testing these predictions quickly. The use of the computer makes it possible to operate at a new level and the computer shows the limiting process clearly.
"Given all that information would anyone like to check a result or predict what will happen to any pair of numbers?"
There's a chance to discuss whether these sequences will ever actually reach their limits.
Students could test their hypotheses working on paper, or everyone could be given access to spreadsheets. When students are convinced that they know how to find these limits, challenge them to suggest some reasons why the limits behave as they do.
Students could then move on to working on these:
What would happen if sequences were generated from three initial values by:
Can you tell where these numbers are heading?
Does it matter if I swap the two starting numbers around?
What do these long decimals mean? How big is that number, roughly?
This problem is a good context for work on organisation skills and calculator competence with opportunities for making conjectures, and refining conjectures.
Laurinda Brown (1983) wrote about using this problem in the classroom: in Mathematics...with a Micro 1, pp.22-25, Waddingham, Jo (ed), Bristol, County of Avon, Resources for Learning Development Unit. The lesson notes above are adapted from her descriptions of using the problem.
Two students collected some data on the wingspan of bats, but each lost a measurement. Can you find the missing information?
When Kate ate a giant date, the average weight of the dates decreased. What was the weight of the date that Kate ate?
How many visitors does a tourist attraction need next week in order to break even?