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Preview of Valentine's Day Math Project: Percents, Discounts, Tax & Tips Activity

Valentine's Day Math Project: Percents, Discounts, Tax & Tips Activity

Looking for a Real World Valentine's Day Math Activity? This engaging Shopping Project helps middle school students master Percents, Discounts, Sales Tax, and Tips through a fun, hands-on simulation! Transform your classroom into "Cupid's Gift Shop" where students shop for roses, chocolates, and dinner dates while sticking to a budget. Stop the "When will I use this?" questions! This No-Prep activity brings math to life. Instead of boring drills, students use a realistic Gift Shop Menu and
Preview of Make Your Own Company

Make Your Own Company

I came up with the idea of creating a company as a form of authentic intellectual work. Fortunately for me, my principal officially observed me during this particular lesson and told me later that he taught it was “exceptional”. I hope you can use it in your classroom so the students can use their creativity and learn math at the same time. There’s a broad range of mathematical value that can be associated to this lesson including, but not limited to: Ordering decimals Adding decimals Subtractin
Preview of The Chocolate Shop:  Project Based Learning

The Chocolate Shop: Project Based Learning

Engage your students in a fun relevant project creating and managing a chocolate shop. A variety of skills are used in this project including basic math skills such as addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. Fractions, percents, and measurement conversions are also used. Students engage in language arts skills as well such as reading direcitons, writing, and creative art. Use this project over the course of a week, individually, partners, or cooperative groups; the possibilities
Preview of Tape Diagrams: Computing Parts of a Whole

Tape Diagrams: Computing Parts of a Whole

This PowerPoint presentation serves as an introduction to solving problems that involve finding parts of a whole by using tape diagrams. The process is clearly explained and modeled including examples using fractions and percents converted to fractions. The product can be used as an interactive class lesson or for individual student use due to absence or remediation. The amount of time spent using this presentation will vary depending on the teacher's usage of stopping points and/or student inte
Preview of 4th–8th Grade Oregon Trail Game  Companion Bundle | No-Prep Reflection Journal

4th–8th Grade Oregon Trail Game Companion Bundle | No-Prep Reflection Journal

Created by
Science Stop
🛖 Turn free gameplay into a REAL learning experience! This no-prep companion bundle transforms the free Oregon Trail game at oregontrail.ws into a fully documented, standards-aligned lesson your students won't forget. 📋 What's Included (6 Activities): 📓 Game Reflection Journal — complete WHILE playing (Grades 4–5 AND 6–8 versions) 🧮 Math Tie-In Worksheet — budget math, ratios & proportions (both grade bands) 🃏 30 Event Discussion Cards — print, cut & debrief (dysentery, river crossings, d
Preview of Bills, Bills, Bills - Computing living expenses with a budget

Bills, Bills, Bills - Computing living expenses with a budget

Students choose a career and use the profession's median salary to calculate how to live within their budget. They will use the provided, real-world data to compute the amount of their salary that is used for taxes, insurance, utilities, housing, etc. They will use fractions, decimals, and percents to figure out how much of their salary is left after expenses.
Preview of Order of Operations Escape Room Math Activity | PEMDAS Review, Team Challenge

Order of Operations Escape Room Math Activity | PEMDAS Review, Team Challenge

Your students do not need another worksheet they forget five minutes later. They need a reason to care. This Order of Operations Escape Room turns a skill that often feels dry and repetitive into a fast-paced math mission where every correct answer unlocks the next step. Instead of begging students to focus on parentheses, multiplication, division, addition, and subtraction in the right order, you hand them a challenge they actually want to solve. Now they are leaning in, checking each other’s
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