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Exponent Practice Task Cards or Intervention Set
Exponent Practice Task Cards or Intervention Set
Exponent Practice Task Cards or Intervention Set
Exponent Practice Task Cards or Intervention Set
Exponent Practice Task Cards or Intervention Set
Exponent Practice Task Cards or Intervention Set
Exponent Practice Task Cards or Intervention Set
Exponent Practice Task Cards or Intervention Set
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Description

Do your students need extra practice working with exponents? This is a bundle of exponent activity task cards to practice working with exponents.

This product contains 7 sets of exponent practice

1. Mixed Practice (writing in expanded form, writing in exponent form, writing in standard form.

2. Solving for x and y

3. Solve the Exponent Problem

4. Word Problems with Exponents (Comparing)

5. Ordering Exponents (Least to Greatest)

6. Adding/Subtracting Exponents

7. Fill in the missing blank with the correct number to make the number sentence true (exponent and/or base)

*BONUS* Order of operations with exponent practice

To Use: Print the task cards out. Place around the room or on student desks. Students will move from card to card while answering the questions. You can give them a clipboard if necessary.

Tip: Instead of students moving, you can always pass the task card itself from student to student. This can also be completed whole group using the large task card PDF file. Finally, students can complete in small group or station work independently.

How I use these task cards during my math lab intervention course that I teach: I play a game in my class called Math Battle. I show one task card under the document camera. Students are put into teams. Every student answers the question. I randomly call on a student (usually using the website "Wheel of Names"), the student will answer. If they get it right, their team will get a point. If they get it wrong, I spin again for another player to try and earn a point for their team. Before answering, they can "ask a friend" for help. At the end of the game, the team with the most points wins. I usually give out a piece of candy or a free work pass (they love this).

These can be printed using a black and white copier on colored paper if you choose. I hope you enjoy them as much as my students have.

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.

Exponent Practice Task Cards or Intervention Set

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Highlights

Grades icon
Grades
5th - 8th
Pages
45
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
30 minutes

Description

Do your students need extra practice working with exponents? This is a bundle of exponent activity task cards to practice working with exponents.

This product contains 7 sets of exponent practice

1. Mixed Practice (writing in expanded form, writing in exponent form, writing in standard form.

2. Solving for x and y

3. Solve the Exponent Problem

4. Word Problems with Exponents (Comparing)

5. Ordering Exponents (Least to Greatest)

6. Adding/Subtracting Exponents

7. Fill in the missing blank with the correct number to make the number sentence true (exponent and/or base)

*BONUS* Order of operations with exponent practice

To Use: Print the task cards out. Place around the room or on student desks. Students will move from card to card while answering the questions. You can give them a clipboard if necessary.

Tip: Instead of students moving, you can always pass the task card itself from student to student. This can also be completed whole group using the large task card PDF file. Finally, students can complete in small group or station work independently.

How I use these task cards during my math lab intervention course that I teach: I play a game in my class called Math Battle. I show one task card under the document camera. Students are put into teams. Every student answers the question. I randomly call on a student (usually using the website "Wheel of Names"), the student will answer. If they get it right, their team will get a point. If they get it wrong, I spin again for another player to try and earn a point for their team. Before answering, they can "ask a friend" for help. At the end of the game, the team with the most points wins. I usually give out a piece of candy or a free work pass (they love this).

These can be printed using a black and white copier on colored paper if you choose. I hope you enjoy them as much as my students have.

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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