I'm teaching a Calc 2 class now (integration and applications) and I'm surprised that more than a handful of students seem to think the graph of $y=x^2$ on $-1\le x\le 1$ is part of a circle!
Here is a quiz question I posed:
Consider the part of the parabola $y=x^2$ that goes from the point $(-1,1)$ to $(1,1)$. Suppose I used the arc length formula to find the length of that curve and I got an answer of $2\sqrt{2}$. Explain to me how you can be sure that my answer is too small.
Here are two answers I got from students:
- "The answer is too small because the graph only extends from (-1,1) to (1,1), which means that the shape is half of a circle and not a whole circle."
- "The distance between these two points is 2 units, and this portion of the parabola resembles a circle. If the diameter is 2, then the circumference should be about 2pi, or 6.28. Half of this would be 3.14, and 2 root 2 is only about 2.83."
Questions:
- Where does this come from? Is there evidence that students tend to confuse parabolas with circles, in general? Or is it only in particular cases, like this one where they were already asked to think geometrically?
- Is there a short presentation I can give in class to, once and for all, convince students these are two different curves? Ideally, this could be just a 5-minute (max) discussion in class to say, "Look at how these are different. Remember this!" This could involve basic geometry or calculus or both.
- Has anyone else noticed this? What was your audience? How did you first notice this phenomenon? What did you do to address it?
(Note: I realize there are likely other issues at play with this particular quiz question. For instance, Student #2 might think that the only way to show some value is too small is to find the correct value and point out that it's bigger. Perhaps that made them make a mistake they wouldn't usually make: conflating parabola with circle. But the fact remains, they conflated the two, and it's that phenomenon about which I'm curious.)