This resource is a reference sheet intended for students to use throughout the unit and/or as a review when the process is required as part of another topic. There are also a fill-in the blank and short answer versions. These sheets cover the following topics: Factoring GCF Factoring by Grouping Factoring Quadratic Trinomials Factoring Perfect Square Trinomials Factoring Difference of Squares Factoring Sum or Difference of Cubes
Celebrate Pi day, March 12th, with these five activities. Activities include active reading, crossword puzzle, word search, mathlib (a spin on Mad Libs) and an exploration activity. Directions and answer keys are included.
This resource is a reference sheet intended to use throughout a unit, as a summary or review. There are also a fill-in the blank and short answer versions. These sheets cover the following topics: Irrational and rational numbers, properties of real numbers, closed sets, order of operations, solving one-variable equations, extraneous solutions and one variable absolute value equations.
This resource contains notes pages relating the horizontal number line to the x-axis and a vertical number line to the y-axis. The ordered pairs include integers, decimals and fractions. There are also practice problems.
Use this math interview, an editable Google form, to gain insight into your students' mathematical identity, journey and general understanding of mathematics.
These pages are meant as a reference, review or summary of topics. Rigid and non-rigid transformations are addressed. General, absolute value and blank forms are provided.
This resource is a reference sheet intended to use throughout a unit, as a summary or review. There are also a fill-in the blank and short answer versions included. These sheets cover the following topics: Relations Domain and Range Identifying and Evaluating Functions Function Notation
This reference sheet reminds students of math frequently forgotten properties and rules that all levels of math students need to use. There is an activity sheet where students create their own examples using these properties and rules.