Download this note taking page and adapt it to if your classroom needs. Use the original percents at the top as your examples for the rest of the document or make up problems to fill in with the students. Let the students use these notes to help them through homework assignments, activities, and on tests.
This is a worksheet for converting between percents, fractions, and decimals. It can be completed in class, for homework, or cooperatively in small groups. The numbers are easily edited to create additional versions.
Assess your students' knowledge about rates and unit rates. Students must complete a rate table, have an understanding of unit rate, and use rates to solve problems. Answer key included!
This is an informal assessment that can be used to see if students are able to identify mixed numbers and improper fractions. There are two quizzes per page and four questions per quiz.
This activity is for cooperate learning groups. Students within the group each begin with an activity page. The student solves the first percent problem and then passes it to the next person. That person then checks the work of the person before them and then solves the next problem. This process continues until everyone within the group has checked a previous problem and solved one of their own.
This quiz is about subtracting fractions, including mixed fractions in which the fraction portion of the mixed fraction being subtracted is larger than the fraction being subtracted from, so that regrouping or converting into an improper fraction needs to happen to do the calculation.
There are also questions with fractions being multiplied by whole numbers.
2 FOR THE PRICE OF 1! I've included two quizzes for the price of one. The first is converting improper fractions to mixed numbers, and the next is reducing fractions. Both of these quizzes will greatly help in preparing for the MAPS nationwide test, and many other standards tests. These quizzes are standards based and are a superb way for you and your students to see if they've conquered these standards. Enjoy! Answer key included.
This is weekly quiz I give for percents. It is the beginning of percents (after starting ratios). It is a good test to see if they are understanding how to find an equivalent fraction with a denominator of 100.
Cards you can use to make math stations where students can practice comparing and ordering fractions, decimals, andpercents in isolation or mixed together.