Description
A great FREE extension for your students to complete after they do the "Hands-on Fraction, Decimal, and Percent Activity" (which focuses on trying to break a world record and seeing how you compared statistically).
Students who really enjoyed the Guinness World Record math activity can take things further by researching another Guinness World Record, planning out how the class could attempt it, and figuring out a way to tie it into math.
Students who really enjoyed the Guinness World Record math activity can take things further by researching another Guinness World Record, planning out how the class could attempt it, and figuring out a way to tie it into math.
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Highlights
Digital downloads
Grades
4th - 6th
Subjects
Pages
1
Description
A great FREE extension for your students to complete after they do the "Hands-on Fraction, Decimal, and Percent Activity" (which focuses on trying to break a world record and seeing how you compared statistically).
Students who really enjoyed the Guinness World Record math activity can take things further by researching another Guinness World Record, planning out how the class could attempt it, and figuring out a way to tie it into math.
Students who really enjoyed the Guinness World Record math activity can take things further by researching another Guinness World Record, planning out how the class could attempt it, and figuring out a way to tie it into math.
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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