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Exit Tickets for First Grade - Numbers & Operations in Base Ten
Exit Tickets for First Grade - Numbers & Operations in Base Ten
Exit Tickets for First Grade - Numbers & Operations in Base Ten
Exit Tickets for First Grade - Numbers & Operations in Base Ten
Exit Tickets for First Grade - Numbers & Operations in Base Ten
Exit Tickets for First Grade - Numbers & Operations in Base Ten
Exit Tickets for First Grade - Numbers & Operations in Base Ten
Exit Tickets for First Grade - Numbers & Operations in Base Ten
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Description

Exit Tickets for Common Core Math Standards - First Grade

Great Formative Assessment Tool! Use these for Teacher Evaluations!

This set of 36 exit tickets is aligned to Numbers & Operations in Base Ten. There are 6 exit tickets for each standard with 2 of the same ticket on each page for easier copying.

Use exit tickets to:

Check students' understanding from the day's lesson.

Verify students can solve problems.

See if students can apply new content learned.

Formulate groups of students who did not understand.

Help plan next day's instruction.

Numbers & Operations in Base Ten Standards Included:

1.NBT.1 (6 tickets)

1.NBT.2 (6 tickets)

1.NBT.3 (6 tickets)

1.NBT.4 (6 tickets)

1.NBT.5 (6 tickets)

1.NBT.6 (6 tickets)

Tips: Exit Tickets are not typically used for grades. They are designed to be completed in 3-4 minutes or less. I look them over quickly and sort them into piles. You can group students in teams based on their answers. Have one student in each group who has a good understanding of the solution or answer. Revisit the concept the next day for review and/or reteaching. If you have just a few students who don't appear to understand the concept, you can pull them aside for more practice.

This packet will also be available in a bundle of exit tickets with all standards.

Created by Catdogteaches

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.

Exit Tickets for First Grade - Numbers & Operations in Base Ten

Catdogteaches
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$3.00

Highlights

Digital downloads
Grades icon
Grades
1st
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Standards
Pages
56
Answer Key
Included

Description

Exit Tickets for Common Core Math Standards - First Grade

Great Formative Assessment Tool! Use these for Teacher Evaluations!

This set of 36 exit tickets is aligned to Numbers & Operations in Base Ten. There are 6 exit tickets for each standard with 2 of the same ticket on each page for easier copying.

Use exit tickets to:

Check students' understanding from the day's lesson.

Verify students can solve problems.

See if students can apply new content learned.

Formulate groups of students who did not understand.

Help plan next day's instruction.

Numbers & Operations in Base Ten Standards Included:

1.NBT.1 (6 tickets)

1.NBT.2 (6 tickets)

1.NBT.3 (6 tickets)

1.NBT.4 (6 tickets)

1.NBT.5 (6 tickets)

1.NBT.6 (6 tickets)

Tips: Exit Tickets are not typically used for grades. They are designed to be completed in 3-4 minutes or less. I look them over quickly and sort them into piles. You can group students in teams based on their answers. Have one student in each group who has a good understanding of the solution or answer. Revisit the concept the next day for review and/or reteaching. If you have just a few students who don't appear to understand the concept, you can pull them aside for more practice.

This packet will also be available in a bundle of exit tickets with all standards.

Created by Catdogteaches

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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Questions & Answers

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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Count to 120, starting at any number less than 120. In this range, read and write numerals and represent a number of objects with a written numeral.
Understand that the two digits of a two-digit number represent amounts of tens and ones. Understand the following as special cases:
10 can be thought of as a bundle of ten ones - called a “ten.”
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