Stage 12 · Inequalities

12.5  Quadratic Inequalities

Read the answer straight off the parabola: where is the curve above the axis, and where below?

For ages 14–16 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 1 of 4 in this lesson: 12.5.1 Read the sign from the parabola

12.5.1 Read the sign from the parabola

Take the upward-opening parabola y = x² − x − 6. Factor the right side and the crossing points fall right out:

x² − x − 6 = (x − 3)(x + 2),   so it crosses at  x = −2  and  x = 3.

(Check the middle term: −3x + 2x = −x ✓, and the constant −3 · 2 = −6 ✓.) Now picture the curve. It is a valley — it opens upward — with its low point dipping below the axis between those two crossings, and both arms reaching up high outside them. So the value of x² − x − 6 tells you exactly where the curve is:

Read it straight off the hero figure at the top. Outside the roots the curve is up high, so

x² − x − 6 > 0  ⇒  x < −2  or  x > 3  (the two outside pieces).

Between the roots the curve dips under, so

x² − x − 6 < 0  ⇒  −2 < x < 3  (the one middle piece).

Key idea

For an upward parabola: above the axis = outside the roots (the > 0 answer is two rays), and below the axis = between the roots (the < 0 answer is the middle interval). The roots are the boundary; the relation just tells you which stretches to keep.

Watch out

The most common slip is getting inside and outside backward. Burn this in: < 0 is between (the dip), > 0 is outside (the arms). If you are ever unsure, sketch the valley for two seconds — the picture never lies.

🎮 Try it PARABOLA SIGN READER
Slide the point along y = x² − x − 6. Watch whether it is above or below the axis — that is the sign. Then choose a relation and the matching stretch lights up green on the line below.
Point at x = 1.0
Shade where
eastmath.com · 12.5 Quadratic Inequalities · 12.5.1 Read the sign from the parabola