Students will practice graphing linear functions written in both standard and slope-intercept forms. This can be done as a project, and students get the chance to show their artistic sides by coloring. As a bonus, this makes a great addition to your educator effectiveness portfolio!
This coloring activity is a fun way to help students practice converting between logarithm and exponential form. The end result is a pretty picture that you can hang in your classroom and a student who is a whiz at converting from log to exponential form!
Bundle includes three activities: card draw, dice roll and coin toss. All three activities include teacher instructions, student recording sheet, graphs and analysis questions. These are great activities to do at the end of the year or before a holiday! Student have fun, and activities prompt math discourse and student analysis.
This is a simple coloring activity to practice finding the values of special angles from the unit circle. Students can use their calculator or their unit circle. They can use the answers given to determine what to color each piece of the picture. This is a fun alternative to a worksheet and gives students the opportunity to have some fun with coloring while they learn about trig values and the unit circle.
This is a fun activity for students to practice finding the determinant of a matrix. They will find the determinant of each matrix and match it to the answer. Once the pieces are matched together, the pieces will create a square. Students can find the determinant by hand or with a graphing calculator. This activity is a nice alternative to a worksheet, and can be used as an assessment.
This is a lesson on Linear Programming, a topic usually covered in Algebra 2. The lesson contains student notes with blanks for vocab and space to do problems; teacher notes with the words filled in and problems done; a smartfile for your smartboard; and a worksheet for students to do after the lesson. This lesson should take 2-3 days to cover, depending on the pace at which your students are comfortable.
This activity focuses on solving equations containing e or ln. Students will have to solve using the opposite function. The equations are fairly easy and will help students figure out how to use natural logs. Students then use the solutions to color a picture.
Get your students graphing with these graphing activities! Students can practice graphing points while creating their favorite DC superhero's icon. This activity includes 6 different graphing options, at varying levels of difficulty. Graph paper is included with each activity.
This is a simple coloring activity to practice finding the values of special angles in radians from the unit circle. Students can use their calculator or their unit circle. They use the answers given to determine what to color each piece of the picture. This is a fun alternative to a worksheet and gives students the opportunity to have some fun with coloring while they learn about trig values and the unit circle.
This activity will help you students determine the degree and leading coefficient of polynomials. They will become proficient in polynomial vocab while showing off their artistic side by coloring!
Student will practice graphing linear functions in standard form, while using their artistic abilities to make it beautiful! All equations are in standard form, and student can practice graphing by intercepts or changing to slope-intercept form. As a bonus, this activity makes a great addition to your educator effectiveness portfolio.
The first unit in Precalculus is all about functions. This product contains all the materials you'll need! Included are student notes, lesson notes (in PowerPoint format), assignments for each lesson, a mid-unit quiz, a review and two forms of the test with keys.
This activity is great for students to work in pairs or groups and prompts some math discourse on how to predict the roll of the dice. Students will roll dice and record the total of each roll. They create a graph with their data and answer questions about their findings. This is a fun activity to jumpstart learning about theoretical and empirical probability.
Students use coins to find probability of tossing a heads or a tails. Students will predict what the results will be before they get started, and then they compare their results with what they thought would happen. Activity includes teacher instructions, questions for students and table to record results.
Once you have talked about all the ways to solve quadratic equations, it is helpful for students to figure out what way works best for specific situations. This scavenger hunt allows them to practice solving quadratics using the method of their choice: factoring, completing the square and quadratic formula (square rooting is not included this time). Some are factorable, some have radicals that need to be simplified, and some have complex roots. Students can do their work on the back of the answe
9th - 12th
Algebra, Algebra 2
CCSS
HSA-REI.B.4
, HSA-REI.B.4a
, HSA-REI.B.4b
$2.00
Original Price $2.00
Rated 5 out of 5, based on 2 reviews
5.0 (2)
Showing 1-20 of 54 results
About the store
Experience
15 years in teaching
2 years in educational materials
Additional biographical information
I love teaching math! I always try to find fun ways to share concepts with students. I believe the most important part of teaching is building relationships. I do my best to connect with students and to make their learning experience FUN!
TPT is the largest marketplace for PreK-12 resources, powered by a community of educators.