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STEM Room Design
STEM Room Design
STEM Room Design
STEM Room Design
STEM Room Design
STEM Room Design
STEM Room Design
STEM Room Design
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Description

In this highly engaging STEM project, students imagine and plan their dream bedroom before building a scaled model and completing a cost analysis. Students will use many math skills including scale factor, measurements, and working with money. Students will complete a virtual shopping trip and find the real world cost of their dream bedroom. Creativity is encouraged, critical thinking is required, fun is expected!
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STEM Room Design

Ms Baird
78 Followers
$2.50

Highlights

Digital downloads
Grades icon
Grades
5th - 8th
Standards icon
Standards
Pages
9
Answer Key
Rubric only
Teaching Duration
1 Week

Description

In this highly engaging STEM project, students imagine and plan their dream bedroom before building a scaled model and completing a cost analysis. Students will use many math skills including scale factor, measurements, and working with money. Students will complete a virtual shopping trip and find the real world cost of their dream bedroom. Creativity is encouraged, critical thinking is required, fun is expected!
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).
Solve problems involving scale drawings of geometric figures, including computing actual lengths and areas from a scale drawing and reproducing a scale drawing at a different scale.
Draw (freehand, with ruler and protractor, and with technology) geometric shapes with given conditions. Focus on constructing triangles from three measures of angles or sides, noticing when the conditions determine a unique triangle, more than one triangle, or no triangle.
Model with mathematics. Mathematically proficient students can apply the mathematics they know to solve problems arising in everyday life, society, and the workplace. In early grades, this might be as simple as writing an addition equation to describe a situation. In middle grades, a student might apply proportional reasoning to plan a school event or analyze a problem in the community. By high school, a student might use geometry to solve a design problem or use a function to describe how one quantity of interest depends on another. Mathematically proficient students who can apply what they know are comfortable making assumptions and approximations to simplify a complicated situation, realizing that these may need revision later. They are able to identify important quantities in a practical situation and map their relationships using such tools as diagrams, two-way tables, graphs, flowcharts and formulas. They can analyze those relationships mathematically to draw conclusions. They routinely interpret their mathematical results in the context of the situation and reflect on whether the results make sense, possibly improving the model if it has not served its purpose.
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