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Problem Based Task - Patterns at the Pumpkin Patch
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Description

This problem-based task is geared towards elementary and middle school math students. This task is very open-ended and can be solved using a variety of strategies. Immerse your students in a new way of thinking outside the box! This product is a word document and fully editable!

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Problem Based Task - Patterns at the Pumpkin Patch

Mrs Lets do Math
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$2.00

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Digital downloads
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Grades
3rd - 12th
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Standards

Description

This problem-based task is geared towards elementary and middle school math students. This task is very open-ended and can be solved using a variety of strategies. Immerse your students in a new way of thinking outside the box! This product is a word document and fully editable!

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).
Identify arithmetic patterns (including patterns in the addition table or multiplication table), and explain them using properties of operations. For example, observe that 4 times a number is always even, and explain why 4 times a number can be decomposed into two equal addends.
Generate a number or shape pattern that follows a given rule. Identify apparent features of the pattern that were not explicit in the rule itself. For example, given the rule “Add 3” and the starting number 1, generate terms in the resulting sequence and observe that the terms appear to alternate between odd and even numbers. Explain informally why the numbers will continue to alternate in this way.
Generate two numerical patterns using two given rules. Identify apparent relationships between corresponding terms. Form ordered pairs consisting of corresponding terms from the two patterns, and graph the ordered pairs on a coordinate plane. For example, given the rule “Add 3” and the starting number 0, and given the rule “Add 6” and the starting number 0, generate terms in the resulting sequences, and observe that the terms in one sequence are twice the corresponding terms in the other sequence. Explain informally why this is so.
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