enh89 said:
Does anyone have any tips for how to tell which test I should be using when I look at a sequence or series? (my idea is- when in doubt, use ratio test).
I first taught myself to recognize and name series (geometric series, telescoping series, harmonic series, p-series, alternating series, etc). All of these series have their own set of conditions and rules to follow, so it is difficult to identify which series you're looking at at first (but keep with it and study the theorems of each series and you'll quickly be able to recognize which type of series you are looking at).
I then practiced by working out multiple exercises that had varying series.
I asked multiple questions.
Lastly, I used note cards to define each type of series and I wrote out a step-by-step method to determine the convergence (or divergence) of each series.
If I couldn't tell which type of series I was looking at I followed the following advice (which I read while doing my home work on Pearson's MyMathLab):
"If the general kth term of the series involves k!, k^k, or a^k, where a is a constant, the Ratio Test is advisable. Series with k in an exponent may yield to the Root Test. If the general kth term of the series is a rational function of k (or a root of a rational function), use the Comparison Test or the Limit Comparison Test."
Lastly, to answer your question (which is the title of your thread), the convergence test you use matters because it either proves, or disproves, what our intuition tells us about a given series. Because each type of series has its own conditions and rules, we have to be careful which convergence test we use. For instance, its easy to think that the harmonic series converges because the limit of its underlying sequence goes to zero. However, despite some people's intuition, we can use the p-series rules to prove that the harmonic series diverges. Furthermore, we can support our conclusions from the p-series by performing the integral test on the harmonic series. In reality, although the limit of the underlying sequence goes to zero (and looks like it converges to zero), it doesn't go to zero fast enough and therefore diverges. In short, we can use convergence tests to support or refute our intuition (because let's face it, we're all human and our intuition is not always right).