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Doubles, Halves, Squares, and Square Roots IV
Doubles, Halves, Squares, and Square Roots IV
Doubles, Halves, Squares, and Square Roots IV
Doubles, Halves, Squares, and Square Roots IV
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Description

Students often confuse doubles and squares, square roots, and halves. This worksheet has a table with n, n^2, sqrt n, 2n, and n/2. For each row one of the values is given and you have to find the others. It gives an opportunity to talk about patterns as well.

This is ready to print, or to assign as an online Easel Activity. The digital version is ready-to-use, but you can edit the instructions and locations of answer boxes to fit your needs.

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Doubles, Halves, Squares, and Square Roots IV

Jane Gillette
63 Followers
$2.00

Highlights

Digital downloads
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Grades
8th - 9th
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Standards
Pages
2
Answer Key
Included

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A set of 5 worksheets to practice recognizing the differences between doubling and squaring, taking the square root, and halving. Each page has a table with n, n^2, sqrt n, 2n, and n/2. For each row one of the values is given and you have to find the others. It also gives an opportunity to explore p
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Description

Students often confuse doubles and squares, square roots, and halves. This worksheet has a table with n, n^2, sqrt n, 2n, and n/2. For each row one of the values is given and you have to find the others. It gives an opportunity to talk about patterns as well.

This is ready to print, or to assign as an online Easel Activity. The digital version is ready-to-use, but you can edit the instructions and locations of answer boxes to fit your needs.

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.

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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Use square root and cube root symbols to represent solutions to equations of the form 𝘹² = 𝘱 and 𝘹³ = 𝘱, where 𝘱 is a positive rational number. Evaluate square roots of small perfect squares and cube roots of small perfect cubes. Know that √2 is irrational.
Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning. Mathematically proficient students notice if calculations are repeated, and look both for general methods and for shortcuts. Upper elementary students might notice when dividing 25 by 11 that they are repeating the same calculations over and over again, and conclude they have a repeating decimal. By paying attention to the calculation of slope as they repeatedly check whether points are on the line through (1, 2) with slope 3, middle school students might abstract the equation (𝑦 – 2)/(π‘₯ – 1) = 3. Noticing the regularity in the way terms cancel when expanding (π‘₯ – 1)(π‘₯ + 1), (π‘₯ – 1)(π‘₯Β² + π‘₯ + 1), and (π‘₯ – 1)(π‘₯Β³ + π‘₯Β² + π‘₯ + 1) might lead them to the general formula for the sum of a geometric series. As they work to solve a problem, mathematically proficient students maintain oversight of the process, while attending to the details. They continually evaluate the reasonableness of their intermediate results.
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