Back to National 5 Mathematics

SQA National 5 Mathematics

Graph transformations

Sketching simple translations and stretches from a known graph.

Before you start

  • Read the command word and identify what is being asked.
  • Write down the relevant formula, rule or algebraic structure before substituting values.
  • Keep working set out line by line so method marks are clear.
National 5 Mathematics lesson

Explanation

Graph transformations is part of Graphs and Functions in SQA National 5 Mathematics. The key skill is choosing a method and communicating the working clearly.

For graph transformations, underline the values or algebraic terms you are given, choose the matching rule, then simplify one line at a time.

National 5 answers should show enough working for a marker to follow the method. Exact answers are expected where the question asks for exact form; otherwise round only at the end.

Key formulae and rules

  • Calculator and non-calculator methods may both be useful.
  • Straight line form: y = mx + c

Watch out

Choosing a method from a remembered keyword instead of reading the whole question.

Check

Compare your answer with the size you expected from the question.

Exam tip

Method marks come from clear setup and correct mathematical notation, not just a final answer.

Calculator tip

Use brackets for fractions, powers and square roots, then round only at the final line.

Worked examples

Worked example 1

Substitute into a function

For f(x) = 2x + 3, find f(4).

  1. Replace x with 4.
  2. f(4) = 2(4) + 3
  3. f(4) = 11

Answer: f(4) = 11

Worked example 2

Find a gradient

Find the gradient through (1, 4) and (5, 12).

  1. Change in y = 12 − 4 = 8
  2. Change in x = 5 − 1 = 4
  3. Gradient = 8 / 4.

So: Gradient = 2.

Worked example 3

Read an intercept

State the y-intercept of y = −3x + 6.

  1. Compare with y = mx + c
  2. The constant term is c = 6.

Answer: The y-intercept is 6.

Watch out

  • Choosing a method from a remembered keyword instead of reading the whole question.
  • Dropping negative signs, powers or brackets during the working.
  • Giving a rounded decimal when an exact answer or algebraic form is needed.