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Math Squirrels

Rated 5 out of 5, based on 4 reviews
7 Followers
Melbourne, Florida, United States
About the store
34 years teaching elementary, middle, and high school students; Middle School and High School Math Certification; Gifted Endorsement
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Preview of Slope Between Two Points Card Sort Activity

Slope Between Two Points Card Sort Activity

Created by
Math Squirrels
Slope Between Two Points Card Sort Activity Review calculating the slope of a line given two points on the line with this quick and enjoyable card sort activity. Use it as practice after teaching the concept, as a review before a test, or to revisit the concept before building on it in other lessons.  We are just getting started, so watch for more resources coming soon! We’d be happy to consider any suggestions for new content.Copyright information: By downloading this resource, you obtain licen
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About the store

Experience

34 years teaching elementary, middle, and high school students; Middle School and High School Math Certification; Gifted Endorsement

Teaching style

Learn by doing! Does the class period feel too short to go over last night’s homework solutions, answer questions, teach the new lesson, and do some practice so your students aren’t totally lost at home? Have you gotten frustrated with teaching a lesson while your students take copious notes, only to find that they are unable to do the homework? Are your students’ parents frustrated because they can’t help their students at home? Are your students simply not doing homework? Do you constantly wonder how you can cover ALL your standards in one school year? Yup! That was my story, too! Something had to give! I realized that the most effective use of my class time was practice – guided and with immediate feedback. So, when do I teach the lesson? I do it within the practice! The constant repetitive practice that we do in class is the great equalizer. It levels the playing field for students who have no access to help at home, for those who work jobs and have no time for homework, for those with learning disabilities who really need a teacher nearby when they are practicing, and for those who believe they are naturally bad at math when really they just need consistent doses of success. Immediate, positive, constructive feedback is powerful! “My child likes math again,” and “I’ve never been good at math, but I get this stuff!” are things I hear often. It’s music to my ears! All it takes is to make the majority of your class time guided practice, practice, practice.