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New Yearโ€™s Jeopardy Game Rates, Ratios & Unit Rates 6th Grade - Winter Math
New Yearโ€™s Jeopardy Game Rates, Ratios & Unit Rates 6th Grade - Winter Math
New Yearโ€™s Jeopardy Game Rates, Ratios & Unit Rates 6th Grade - Winter Math
New Yearโ€™s Jeopardy Game Rates, Ratios & Unit Rates 6th Grade - Winter Math
New Yearโ€™s Jeopardy Game Rates, Ratios & Unit Rates 6th Grade - Winter Math
New Yearโ€™s Jeopardy Game Rates, Ratios & Unit Rates 6th Grade - Winter Math
New Yearโ€™s Jeopardy Game Rates, Ratios & Unit Rates 6th Grade - Winter Math
New Yearโ€™s Jeopardy Game Rates, Ratios & Unit Rates 6th Grade - Winter Math
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Description

Add some holiday fun with this 6th Grade New Year's Jeopardy review game on rates & ratios! This no-prep, interactive Jeopardy-style math review helps students master rates, ratios, unit rates, comparing rates, and measurement conversions. Perfect for test prep and review, and the New Year's theme adds a festive touch!

With 25 questions of increasing difficulty plus a Final Jeopardy, itโ€™s designed to keep students engaged while reinforcing critical 6th Grade CCSS skills. This resource is also a great review of 6th-grade concepts before beginning 7th-grade work with ratios and proportional relationships.

Teachers love using this test prep game as a fun way to strengthen proportional reasoning while preparing students for success.

Topics include:

  • Simplifying and Writing Ratios
  • Ratios and Unit Rates
  • Comparing Rates
  • Measurement Conversions within systems and between systems

Looking for more engaging 6th-grade math review and test prep activities?

Math Riddles:

Jeopardy Games

See my store, Kristin Hazelton - Hazelton's Hub, for more math games, holiday resources, and other engaging math and ELA resources!

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.

New Yearโ€™s Jeopardy Game Rates, Ratios & Unit Rates 6th Grade - Winter Math

$4.00

Highlights

Digital downloads
Grades icon
Grades
5th - 7th
Standards icon
Standards
Pages
56 slides
Answer Key
Included

Description

Add some holiday fun with this 6th Grade New Year's Jeopardy review game on rates & ratios! This no-prep, interactive Jeopardy-style math review helps students master rates, ratios, unit rates, comparing rates, and measurement conversions. Perfect for test prep and review, and the New Year's theme adds a festive touch!

With 25 questions of increasing difficulty plus a Final Jeopardy, itโ€™s designed to keep students engaged while reinforcing critical 6th Grade CCSS skills. This resource is also a great review of 6th-grade concepts before beginning 7th-grade work with ratios and proportional relationships.

Teachers love using this test prep game as a fun way to strengthen proportional reasoning while preparing students for success.

Topics include:

  • Simplifying and Writing Ratios
  • Ratios and Unit Rates
  • Comparing Rates
  • Measurement Conversions within systems and between systems

Looking for more engaging 6th-grade math review and test prep activities?

Math Riddles:

Jeopardy Games

See my store, Kristin Hazelton - Hazelton's Hub, for more math games, holiday resources, and other engaging math and ELA resources!

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).
Understand the concept of a ratio and use ratio language to describe a ratio relationship between two quantities. For example, โ€œThe ratio of wings to beaks in the bird house at the zoo was 2:1, because for every 2 wings there was 1 beak.โ€ โ€œFor every vote candidate A received, candidate C received nearly three votes.โ€
Understand the concept of a unit rate ๐˜ข/๐˜ฃ associated with a ratio ๐˜ข:๐˜ฃ with ๐˜ฃ โ‰  0, and use rate language in the context of a ratio relationship. For example, โ€œThis recipe has a ratio of 3 cups of flour to 4 cups of sugar, so there is 3/4 cup of flour for each cup of sugar.โ€ โ€œWe paid $75 for 15 hamburgers, which is a rate of $5 per hamburger.โ€
Use ratio and rate reasoning to solve real-world and mathematical problems, e.g., by reasoning about tables of equivalent ratios, tape diagrams, double number line diagrams, or equations.
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