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Eureka Math PowerPoint: 4th Grade Module 6 Lessons 1-14
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Description

Eureka Math is a free curriculum that was written by Great Minds, an advocacy group made up of teachers and math experts. I have been using the Eureka Math curriculum for more than five years now and found that PowerPoints allowed me to manage instructional time all while engaging my students. I am selling my time and creativity in creating a PPT supplement to help teachers teach the Eureka Math content.

This is a PowerPoint resource that will help you teach all components of a Eureka Math lesson without the use of the teacher's edition. It includes slides for Module 6 Lessons 1-14 (omits 7 and 12) and includes the Do Now, Agenda, Performance Based Objective, Fluency, Application Problems, Problem Sets, Debriefs, Exit Tickets, and Homework. If you purchase, be sure to preview each lesson in Slide Show because most of the slides require a click of the mouse for animations/answers/text to appear. These slides may look jumbled in design mode.

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Eureka Math PowerPoint: 4th Grade Module 6 Lessons 1-14

MzMac5
13 Followers
$16.25

Highlights

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Grades
4th
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Subjects
Standards icon
Standards

Description

Eureka Math is a free curriculum that was written by Great Minds, an advocacy group made up of teachers and math experts. I have been using the Eureka Math curriculum for more than five years now and found that PowerPoints allowed me to manage instructional time all while engaging my students. I am selling my time and creativity in creating a PPT supplement to help teachers teach the Eureka Math content.

This is a PowerPoint resource that will help you teach all components of a Eureka Math lesson without the use of the teacher's edition. It includes slides for Module 6 Lessons 1-14 (omits 7 and 12) and includes the Do Now, Agenda, Performance Based Objective, Fluency, Application Problems, Problem Sets, Debriefs, Exit Tickets, and Homework. If you purchase, be sure to preview each lesson in Slide Show because most of the slides require a click of the mouse for animations/answers/text to appear. These slides may look jumbled in design mode.

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).
Express a fraction with denominator 10 as an equivalent fraction with denominator 100, and use this technique to add two fractions with respective denominators 10 and 100. For example, express 3/10 as 30/100, and add 3/10 + 4/100 = 34/100.
Use decimal notation for fractions with denominators 10 or 100. For example, rewrite 0.62 as 62/100; describe a length as 0.62 meters; locate 0.62 on a number line diagram.
Compare two decimals to hundredths by reasoning about their size. Recognize that comparisons are valid only when the two decimals refer to the same whole. Record the results of comparisons with the symbols >, =, or <, and justify the conclusions, e.g., by using a visual model.
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