Respuesta :

Answer:

6/5 or 1.2, they're the same value

Step-by-step explanation:

When it says "rate of change", it's really just asking for the slope. If you don't know what the slope is, essentially how much the y-value increases by whenever x increases by 1. This can be formally defined using the equation: [tex]\frac{y_2-y_1}{x_2-x_1}[/tex] which is essentially [tex]\frac{rise}{run}[/tex]. The subtraction is finding the difference between the two numbers to see how much it's changed by. Btw the order doesn't matter, I could plug in (-3, -2) as (x2, y2) or I could plug it in as (x1, y1) as long as I make sure to input it in correctly. In this example I'll just say (-3, -2) = (x1, y1) and (2, 4) = (x2, y2). Plugging these values into the equation gives you: [tex]\frac{4- (-2)}{2- (-3)} = \frac{6}{5}[/tex] that's the rate of change