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Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies
Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies
Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies
Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies
Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies
Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies
Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies
Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies
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Description

Students can repeat patterns, extend patterns, and create their patterns with this math resource Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies.

Purpose:

Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies are designed for identifying and duplicating a simple repeating pattern.

Description: This math resource Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies has coordinating cut-outs for students to make patterns on 9 different activity mats.

Contents of Resource:

These Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies include

9 activity mats

2 pages of coordinating cut-outs to use to make patterns on mats

Pattern Activity instructions

printing instructions

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Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies

The Real HONEYSUCKLE VINE
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$2.30

Highlights

Digital downloads
Grades icon
Grades
PreK
Subjects icon
Subjects
Standards icon
Standards
Pages
15

Description

Students can repeat patterns, extend patterns, and create their patterns with this math resource Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies.

Purpose:

Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies are designed for identifying and duplicating a simple repeating pattern.

Description: This math resource Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies has coordinating cut-outs for students to make patterns on 9 different activity mats.

Contents of Resource:

These Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies include

9 activity mats

2 pages of coordinating cut-outs to use to make patterns on mats

Pattern Activity instructions

printing instructions

Other Resources You May Like:

Basic Skills Mini Thanksgiving Sorting Mats Special Education Special Education

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Math Basic Skills Patterns Spring Bunnies

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Math Basic Skills Winter Patterns

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).
Look for and make use of structure. Mathematically proficient students look closely to discern a pattern or structure. Young students, for example, might notice that three and seven more is the same amount as seven and three more, or they may sort a collection of shapes according to how many sides the shapes have. Later, students will see 7 × 8 equals the well remembered 7 × 5 + 7 × 3, in preparation for learning about the distributive property. In the expression 𝑥² + 9𝑥 + 14, older students can see the 14 as 2 × 7 and the 9 as 2 + 7. They recognize the significance of an existing line in a geometric figure and can use the strategy of drawing an auxiliary line for solving problems. They also can step back for an overview and shift perspective. They can see complicated things, such as some algebraic expressions, as single objects or as being composed of several objects. For example, they can see 5 – 3(𝑥 – 𝑦)² as 5 minus a positive number times a square and use that to realize that its value cannot be more than 5 for any real numbers 𝑥 and 𝑦.
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)/(𝑥 – 1) = 3. Noticing the regularity in the way terms cancel when expanding (𝑥 – 1)(𝑥 + 1), (𝑥 – 1)(𝑥² + 𝑥 + 1), and (𝑥 – 1)(𝑥³ + 𝑥² + 𝑥 + 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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