This worksheet is designed to help students improve their graphing abilities. They will first collect data from their classmates' favorite sports and create a bar graph based on the findings. On the other side, students will also collect data on their classmates' hair color and produce a bar graph. Both graphs will include information on the x-axis and y-axis, and students will fill in the corresponding bars.
This project will improve the students’ understanding of the rules of divisibility. Note that the rules of divisibility help the students to know whether one number can be divided evenly by another. Teachers can use this project as an easy-to-grade end of term project assignment.
Have students shop through catelogs with a proposed budget for Christmas. They can use coupons to save money, will apply tax and total their purchases. Great real-world application!
Students pick their favorite NFL team and track pre-selected data and graph using mean, median, mode, and the different types of graphs learned to display data. Could easily be used for college football, basketball, hockey, etc.
Have your students use their Percent Proportion skills to design their own functional city. Great for all levels of middle school math and works well with various size graph papers. The smaller the squares, the more challenging it is.
Solving for squares usually takes a day, and the design part will take about 2-3 days. Its more challenging than it seems.
This is a realistic project for students to practice their math skills. They will plan a Thanksgiving dinner and use newspaper ads to shop for the food needed. They will then do appropriate calculations to figure out the total cost of the meal.
Here the students combine the data collection project and turn it into something bigger. They must use writing skills to describe the highs and lows their data shows along with explain what this meant for the team. They must also come up with a way to display their project, include their team name or logo, and allows them to get creative in their design when using the different types of graph. Very open ended project!
A fun math project that helps kids learn facts through repetition. Students draw and create a book that can be used for future reference.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
"Get ready to become math detectives! Today we'll use inequalities to find hidden numbers and solve mysteries." This was a wonderful way to introduce, assess, and practice graphing inequalities. My sixth-graders love to compete whenever possible, and this project was great competition.
Get ready to build your own town with triangles! In this project, we'll learn about triangles, calculate their area, and use them to design a whole town. We'll also learn how to work together and communicate our ideas. This project based learning activity was a blast in my sixth grade classroom. This project would work well as a review activity for older grades.
This project will make kids watch different 30-minute television programs to record the percentage of the 30-min show is commercials. Students will be converting fractions into decimals for this activity. Students will work in a group to compare their findings to answer a couple of questions.
3 sets of 1-20 Number Lines. For best results, print on coloured paper and laminate. One of the sets has an editable heading section, so you can customise the font, the size and change the title to personalise it and include the names of your students. Handy to stick on desks, at the front of books or even to use as a bookmark.
Tasting various samples of chocolate, students score on flavor in four areas, add them then divide by four for an average. Totals data is transferred to a data sheet and then used to produce a class bar graph. All worksheets included with directions, as are Masters for the transparencies to use for class bar graph.
Students win the lottery and are able to go on a shopping spree, a lunch date with friends and to the movies. They must calculate percents and totals along the way. They must also attach images of the outfits they buy (like Pinterest).
A great class activity in which students design a survey question, then survey their peers, track the data, and then create a circle graph to present it.
This project is a great multi-day project for a business or college and career type math class. It divides up the reading of the 13 chapters of the Dave Ramsey book, The Complete Guide to Money, and students teach each other what they learned from reading their chapter. The book is available as a free PDF here: http://bonitaklein.weebly.com/uploads/2/5/3/5/25351487/dr_complete_guide_to_money.pdf
This number project includes examples of what is expected for students to complete in each section. The rubric is on the second page. It covers place value and whole number operations.
Mimic a popular building video game in your classroom by doing this Build-a-Town Area Class Project! Included in file: Explanation, example, and rubric.
This file is fully editable.
Students will plan their own party using PowerPoint or Google Slides. They will need to apply skills in math computation, writing a descriptive paragraph, and use of google images to create a one-of-a-kind presentation.
This project focuses on multiplying, dividing, and adding decimals. It's a project that has a specific scoring system and based on NFL stats the students calculate and record the data. The students are required to create a bar graph to represent each drafted player and their weekly scores.
5th - 7th
Basic Operations, Decimals, Numbers
FREE
Rated 4 out of 5, based on 2 reviews
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