This bundle includes a PowerPoint for a Jeopardy-style review game for Linear Functions, a recording sheet, and an answer key. The game board contains four categories: Rate-of-Change, Graphing, Writing Linear Equations, Word Problems (Situations). Each category has 4 questions with varying levels of difficulty. The game board slide is linked to the various questions. Each question slide is linked back to the gameboard slide. The Double Jeopardy is in the same format with more difficult questions
This Google Form sets the scene with Kanye West kidnapping Taylor Swift. The students must solve 5 problem sets of 4 quadratic equations to unlock 5 locks. Each problem set has a custom error message to encourage students to keep trying. After successful completion of a problem set, students receive an encouraging message from Taylor Swift in the form of a parody of her lyrics and a Taylor GIF. The first two sets of equations can be solved using inverse operations. The third set can be solved by
Guided Notes, PowerPoint Presentation, and Practice for writing linear functions given the slope and y-intercept or a graph. The practice contains problems that give m and b and graphs and situations that give the rate of change and the starting value.
This PowerPoint is a Jeopardy-style review game for Linear Functions. The game board contains four categories: Rate-of-Change, Graphing, Writing Linear Equations, & Word Problems (Situations). Each category has 4 questions with varying levels of difficulty. The game board slide is linked to the various questions. Each question slide is linked back to the gameboard slide. The Double Jeopardy is in the same format with more difficult questions. There is a total of 32 questions, 16 in Jeopardy an
This eye-catching presentation begins with an attention-grabbing GIF. Each element that students should write shows up one at a time with a click. There are three examples. One example is in standard form and has rational solutions. The second example is in standard form and has irrational solutions. The third example is not in standard form and has irrational solutions. Irrational solutions are written in the simplest radical form and approximated. There is also a slide showing how to check one