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5th Grade Word Problems Math Spiral Review Algebraic Thinking DISTANCE LEARNING
5th Grade Word Problems Math Spiral Review Algebraic Thinking DISTANCE LEARNING
5th Grade Word Problems Math Spiral Review Algebraic Thinking DISTANCE LEARNING
5th Grade Word Problems Math Spiral Review Algebraic Thinking DISTANCE LEARNING
5th Grade Word Problems Math Spiral Review Algebraic Thinking DISTANCE LEARNING
5th Grade Word Problems Math Spiral Review Algebraic Thinking DISTANCE LEARNING
5th Grade Word Problems Math Spiral Review Algebraic Thinking DISTANCE LEARNING
5th Grade Word Problems Math Spiral Review Algebraic Thinking DISTANCE LEARNING
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Description

This resource contains five rigorous word problems/questions per standard that promotes conceptual understanding and problem solving. These questions are available in print and digital format (Google Slides in Google Classroom).

Standards and Topics Covered:

Operations & Algebraic Thinking

➥ 5.OA.1 – Order of operations (including parenthesis, brackets, and braces)

➥ 5.OA.2 - Expressions

➥ 5.OA.3 – Patterns

WHAT ARE P.O.W.E.R PROBLEMS?

PURPOSEFUL - These problems are meant to keep students focused, while strengthening initiative and perseverance.

OPPORTUNITIES - These prompts can be used in a variety of ways. P.O.W.E.R problems can be used to introduce a lesson, spiral review, or as formative assessments.

WITH

ENGAGEMENT - Problems are real world applicable and designed to hook students with interest and presentation. Complexity of problems promotes problem solving skills.

RIGOR - Tasks are specifically designed to challenge students and assess conceptual understanding of curriculum versus procedural understanding. Students will need to apply more than just a “formula.”

WHY USE P.O.W.E.R PROBLEMS?

BUILD STAMINA WITHIN YOUR STUDENTS!

P.O.W.E.R problems are designed to challenge your students with their open ended presentation. Majority of problems that come from textbooks and workbooks assess procedural understanding of curriculum. Some textbooks even provide step by step instructions where the textbook is thinking for the students and taking away that “productive struggle” for children. When we rob students of that event, we rob them of their ability to reason, problem solve, and see beyond a standard algorithm. P.O.W.E.R problems are meant to show students that there are different ways to answer one question in math. With these tasks students take ownership and are part of the problem solving process versus filling in blanks in a textbook.

HOW TO USE POWER PROBLEMS:

YOUR KIDS. YOUR CHOICE. FLEXIBILITY.

TO INTRODUCE A LESSON - P.O.W.E.R problems can be used to introduce a new skill. In this case your students will experience a “productive struggle.” Their problem solving skills and prior knowledge will kick in. Often times most of my students will have the incorrect answer or no answer at all. I then have someone explain their method/reasoning and allow my students to critique their peer’s answer. This makes for great accountable talk discussions. If I see that most students do not have an answer I will assist the class in getting to a specific point and then allow them to finish independently.

SPIRAL REVIEW - Avoid your students forgetting standards, by using P.O.W.E.R problems to spiral review previously taught lessons.

FORMATIVE ASSESSMENTS - You can use these problems to assess mastery and levels of understanding.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

WANT THE ENTIRE SET OF POWER PROBLEMS TO SUPERCHARGE YOUR ENTIRE YEAR?

5th Grade Power Problems

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

5th Grade Word Problems Math Spiral Review Algebraic Thinking DISTANCE LEARNING

Tanya Yero Teaching
30.5k Followers
$3.00

Highlights

Digital downloads
Standards icon
Standards
Pages
25
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
1 month

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This set of 5th grade math word problems contains 5 questions for each math standard. The questions are designed to help build conceptual understanding. These questions can be used for whole class lesson starters, 5th grade math small groups, rotations, homework, math spiral review and math test pre
Price $10.00Original Price $15.00Save $5.00
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The POWER Math Ultimate Bundle is everything you need for a successful year of math instruction! The resources found in this bundle were designed with the philosophy in mind that math should be POWERful. POWER stands for purposeful opportunities with engagement and rigor. You and your students deser
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Description

This resource contains five rigorous word problems/questions per standard that promotes conceptual understanding and problem solving. These questions are available in print and digital format (Google Slides in Google Classroom).

Standards and Topics Covered:

Operations & Algebraic Thinking

➥ 5.OA.1 – Order of operations (including parenthesis, brackets, and braces)

➥ 5.OA.2 - Expressions

➥ 5.OA.3 – Patterns

WHAT ARE P.O.W.E.R PROBLEMS?

PURPOSEFUL - These problems are meant to keep students focused, while strengthening initiative and perseverance.

OPPORTUNITIES - These prompts can be used in a variety of ways. P.O.W.E.R problems can be used to introduce a lesson, spiral review, or as formative assessments.

WITH

ENGAGEMENT - Problems are real world applicable and designed to hook students with interest and presentation. Complexity of problems promotes problem solving skills.

RIGOR - Tasks are specifically designed to challenge students and assess conceptual understanding of curriculum versus procedural understanding. Students will need to apply more than just a “formula.”

WHY USE P.O.W.E.R PROBLEMS?

BUILD STAMINA WITHIN YOUR STUDENTS!

P.O.W.E.R problems are designed to challenge your students with their open ended presentation. Majority of problems that come from textbooks and workbooks assess procedural understanding of curriculum. Some textbooks even provide step by step instructions where the textbook is thinking for the students and taking away that “productive struggle” for children. When we rob students of that event, we rob them of their ability to reason, problem solve, and see beyond a standard algorithm. P.O.W.E.R problems are meant to show students that there are different ways to answer one question in math. With these tasks students take ownership and are part of the problem solving process versus filling in blanks in a textbook.

HOW TO USE POWER PROBLEMS:

YOUR KIDS. YOUR CHOICE. FLEXIBILITY.

TO INTRODUCE A LESSON - P.O.W.E.R problems can be used to introduce a new skill. In this case your students will experience a “productive struggle.” Their problem solving skills and prior knowledge will kick in. Often times most of my students will have the incorrect answer or no answer at all. I then have someone explain their method/reasoning and allow my students to critique their peer’s answer. This makes for great accountable talk discussions. If I see that most students do not have an answer I will assist the class in getting to a specific point and then allow them to finish independently.

SPIRAL REVIEW - Avoid your students forgetting standards, by using P.O.W.E.R problems to spiral review previously taught lessons.

FORMATIVE ASSESSMENTS - You can use these problems to assess mastery and levels of understanding.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

WANT THE ENTIRE SET OF POWER PROBLEMS TO SUPERCHARGE YOUR ENTIRE YEAR?

5th Grade Power Problems

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

Reviews

5.0
Rated 5 out of 5, based on 29 reviews
29
ratings
5
29
4
0
3
0
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0
1
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Rated 5 out of 5
April 9, 2025
This was very helpful for my students to practice what we were learning.
LaTosha P.
202 reviews
Grades taught: 5th
Rated 5 out of 5
December 10, 2024
These are helpful in teaching problem solving skills.
Joanna J.
913 reviews
Grades taught: 5th
Rated 5 out of 5
February 9, 2022
Love these! Thanks!
The Resource Loft
(TPT Seller)
208 reviews
Grades taught: 5th
Rated 5 out of 5
January 31, 2022
This was great to help the students review concepts that were covered in the beginning of the year.
Kelsi N.
608 reviews
Grades taught: 5th
Student populations: Learning difficulties
Rated 5 out of 5
January 3, 2022
These are great, rigorous word problems! They are very useful to help challenge my students.
439 reviews
Grades taught: 5th
Rated 5 out of 5
November 15, 2021
Such a great resource! We use it every day!
Farming 4 Knowledge
(TPT Seller)
261 reviews
Grades taught: 5th
Rated 5 out of 5
March 16, 2021
Awesome!
Katharine Argueta
(TPT Seller)
312 reviews
Grades taught: 5th
Rated 5 out of 5
February 23, 2021
Thank you!
Kara F.
533 reviews
Grades taught: 5th

Questions & Answers

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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Use parentheses, brackets, or braces in numerical expressions, and evaluate expressions with these symbols.
Write simple expressions that record calculations with numbers, and interpret numerical expressions without evaluating them. For example, express the calculation “add 8 and 7, then multiply by 2” as 2 × (8 + 7). Recognize that 3 × (18932 + 921) is three times as large as 18932 + 921, without having to calculate the indicated sum or product.
Generate two numerical patterns using two given rules. Identify apparent relationships between corresponding terms. Form ordered pairs consisting of corresponding terms from the two patterns, and graph the ordered pairs on a coordinate plane. For example, given the rule “Add 3” and the starting number 0, and given the rule “Add 6” and the starting number 0, generate terms in the resulting sequences, and observe that the terms in one sequence are twice the corresponding terms in the other sequence. Explain informally why this is so.
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