Description
Engage your students with a classic math bingo game. This version focuses on classifying numbers both rational and irrational. This easy to use activity is sure to be a hit!
Includes:
- 36 unique bingo cards
- Teacher answer key
- 36 clue cards
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Highlights
Description
Engage your students with a classic math bingo game. This version focuses on classifying numbers both rational and irrational. This easy to use activity is sure to be a hit!
Includes:
- 36 unique bingo cards
- Teacher answer key
- 36 clue cards
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.
Reviews
All verified TPT purchases
Great resource. Loved using this in my classroom! Thank you!
My students love Bingo!
Questions & Answers
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Standards
to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
CCSS6.NS.C.6
Understand a rational number as a point on the number line. Extend number line diagrams and coordinate axes familiar from previous grades to represent points on the line and in the plane with negative number coordinates.
CCSS8.NS.A.1
Know that numbers that are not rational are called irrational. Understand informally that every number has a decimal expansion; for rational numbers show that the decimal expansion repeats eventually, and convert a decimal expansion which repeats eventually into a rational number.
CCSS8.NS.A.2
Use rational approximations of irrational numbers to compare the size of irrational numbers, locate them approximately on a number line diagram, and estimate the value of expressions (e.g., π²). For example, by truncating the decimal expansion of √2, show that √2 is between 1 and 2, then between 1.4 and 1.5, and explain how to continue on to get better approximations.
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