Nth term rule

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Cambridge IGCSE Mathematics Note on Nth term rule, created by Aleksandra Olszewska on 18/09/2013.
Aleksandra Olszewska
Note by Aleksandra Olszewska, updated more than 1 year ago
Aleksandra Olszewska
Created by Aleksandra Olszewska about 11 years ago
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a) From looking at the sequence we can see that each term is 6 larger than the previous term. We say the term-to-term rule is "add 6". Therefore the next two terms are 34 and 40.b) The nth term of a sequence is always written in the form "?n + ?".The number in front of the "n" is always the difference to get from one term to the next. Since the difference is 6, the first part of our rule will be "6n". The rule follows the six times table: 6, 12, 18, 24... etc.Now compare the 6 times table with our rule:6 x table612182430Sequence410162228The numbers in the sequence are always 2 less than the 6 times table so we "adjust" our rule by subtracting 2. Now putting this together gives us: nth term = 6n - 2. c) Now we know the nth term = 6n - 2 we just need to substitute n = 50 in order to find the 50thterm of the sequence.So: The 50th term = 6 x 50 - 2                        = 300 - 2                  = 298

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