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Rational and Irrational Numbers Chain Game- Square Roots and Cube Roots Included
Rational and Irrational Numbers Chain Game- Square Roots and Cube Roots Included
Rational and Irrational Numbers Chain Game- Square Roots and Cube Roots Included
Rational and Irrational Numbers Chain Game- Square Roots and Cube Roots Included
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Description

Engage your students in a fun partner activity to explore rational and irrational numbers. Students will compete against their partner to try and form the longest "chain." Each partner will pick a certain color of colored pencil or crayon to use during the game. To make a chain, students will spin the spinner provided and land on either rational or irrational and then they will color in a link of the chain that corresponds with their spin with their assigned color. Whoever has the longest chain at the end is the winner!

This activity include perfect square roots, cube roots, non-perfect square roots, non-perfect cube roots, exponents, decimals, fractions and more! It's a great fun, engaging activity to practice these skills!

I would really appreciate a review of my product! Thank you in advance, and I hope your students love this product!

Report this resource to TPT
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Rational and Irrational Numbers Chain Game- Square Roots and Cube Roots Included

Rated 4.33 out of 5, based on 3 reviews
4.3 (3 ratings)
Mrs MiddleSchoolMath
33 Followers
$1.99

Highlights

Digital downloads
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Grades
7th - 11th
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Standards

Description

Engage your students in a fun partner activity to explore rational and irrational numbers. Students will compete against their partner to try and form the longest "chain." Each partner will pick a certain color of colored pencil or crayon to use during the game. To make a chain, students will spin the spinner provided and land on either rational or irrational and then they will color in a link of the chain that corresponds with their spin with their assigned color. Whoever has the longest chain at the end is the winner!

This activity include perfect square roots, cube roots, non-perfect square roots, non-perfect cube roots, exponents, decimals, fractions and more! It's a great fun, engaging activity to practice these skills!

I would really appreciate a review of my product! Thank you in advance, and I hope your students love this product!

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

4.3
Rated 4.33 out of 5, based on 3 reviews
3
ratings
All verified TPT purchases
Rated 4 out of 5
February 20, 2024
The students were highly engaged in this topic, making this a great resource.
Melanie L.
136 reviews
Grades taught: 8th
Rated 5 out of 5
January 11, 2024
This was good practice for my students to cement the idea of square and cube roots.
Lawrence D.
119 reviews
Grades taught: 8th
Rated 4 out of 5
October 5, 2022
Students were engaged with this resource. Used it to review concepts
Donna H.
228 reviews
Grades taught: 7th, 8th

Questions & Answers

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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Use square root and cube root symbols to represent solutions to equations of the form 𝘹² = 𝘱 and 𝘹³ = 𝘱, where 𝘱 is a positive rational number. Evaluate square roots of small perfect squares and cube roots of small perfect cubes. Know that √2 is irrational.
Explain how the definition of the meaning of rational exponents follows from extending the properties of integer exponents to those values, allowing for a notation for radicals in terms of rational exponents. For example, we define 5 to the 1/3 power to be the cube root of 5 because we want (5 to the 1/3 power)³ = 5 to the (1/3)(3) power to hold, so (5 to the 1/3 power)³ must equal 5.
Explain why the sum or product of two rational numbers is rational; that the sum of a rational number and an irrational number is irrational; and that the product of a nonzero rational number and an irrational number is irrational.
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