Get your Algebra students ready to master the EOC with a Jeopardy Review Game! Categories include: slopedomain and rangelinear functionsliteral equationsx and y intercepts exponential functionsquadratic functionssystems of equationssimplifying exponentssimplifying radicalsAnswers are in the comments/notes below each slide.
This jeopardy review game goes through addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, estimation, and rounding of both whole numbers and decimals. It is a great review to recap a few units! It also features a Daily Double!! The categories include "Knowing What It's About" (estimation), "Break it Down" (vocabulary and steps), "The Whole Problem" (problems using whole numbers), "The Point of the Problem" (problems using decimals), "Picture Perfect" (models), "There's a Problem Here!" (assortmen
Aligns to TEKS 5.2A, 5.2B, 5.2C, 5.3A, 5.3K. Students will love this place value review game! There are 7 categories of questions -- What's the Place? (Basic place value - millions through thousandths), Let's Expand! Word! (Expanded notation and word form), Get In Order! (ordering decimal numbers greatest to least and least to greatest), Who's Bigger? (comparing decimals), Round It! (rounding), This Is What It's All About! (estimation), and Sum up the Difference (addition and subtraction of deci
This is a great review game for Division skills. The categories include "What's This About?"(estimation), "Split it Up"(whole number division with 2 digit divisors), "The Whole Model"(modeling whole number division), "Breaking it Down"(understanding the steps of division and division vocabulary), "Model the Point"(modeling division with decimal dividends), "Making the Point Matter"(division with decimal dividends and 2 digit divisors), and "Quotable Quotients"(various division word problems). An
Aligns to TEKS 5.3H,I,J,K,L. Your students will love this review game! There are 7 categories at 5 different point values to choose from. The categories are Picture This! (models), What's in Common? (LCD), How low can you go? (simplest form), Sum it Up (addition with unlike denominators), What's the Difference? (subtraction with unlike denominators), I've Got Skills--they're Multiplying! (multiplication of fractions), and Split into Pieces (division of fractions). Answer Key is provided in the n
Aligns with TEKS! This is a great game to review measurement concepts with your students! The topics include What's On the Inside? (area), Fence it In (perimeter), Fill it Up! (volume), It's Customary (conversions within the customary system), and King Henry (conversions within the metric system). Includes a Daily Double. Answer key is in the notes. TEKS 5.4H, 5.6A, 5.6B, 5.7
This is a fun game to review multiplication of both whole numbers and decimals up to 4 digits by two digits. There are 35 questions in 7 categories. Point values range from 100-500 in each category. The categories include "We've Got One!" (multiplication of up to 4 by 1 digit whole numbers), "Turtles for Two" (multiplication of up to 4 x 2 digit whole numbers), "The Whole Point" (multiplication of whole number by decimal numbers), "The Point is..." (multiplication of decimal number by decimal nu
This is a great review game for basic algebraic concepts! There are 6 categories: Factor it Out (finding factors), prime or composite?, Express it! (writing numerical expressions), Aunt Sally (order of operations), You Get Out What You Put In (input/output tables), and It's a Balancing Act (solving equations with variables). Clicking the number on the game board will take you to the question, and clicking the number on the question will take you back to the game board. Answer Key is included in
Get ready to rock the STAAR test! Covers 5th grade math TEKS. Categories cover place value, multiplication, division, fractions, algebraic reasoning, area/perimeter/volume, measurement conversions, and data analysis. This could also be a great beginning of the year review for 6th grade. Includes a Double Jeopardy! Answer Key is included in the notes section of the game.
There are 30 questions in the game. They are laid out in a table, with the first question numbered. Print out the table and cut horizontally, so that each student has a card with an answer and an exponent. If playing full class, it is recommended that the teacher hold the first card, if possible, as well as any extras. The entire set is needed to play accurately. To play the game, the teacher (or student with card 1) starts by asking “Who has 8 cubed (or 8 to the third power)?”. Students then
Having trouble with students not turning in their work? I recommend sending this home on colored paper to make sure it catches their attention and the attention of their parents. These are two copies of the form on each page that can be cut into half sheets.
Aligns to the TEKS 5.3B. Students receive a board with answers on them in random order. The teacher holds on to the board which has the equations on it (3x2, 3x1, and 2x1 multiplication problems). The teacher calls out a problem and if student has the answer on their board, they mark it. The game continues until 5 in a row or blackout. This is a great way for students to work on multiplication skills.
4th - 6th
Arithmetic, Basic Operations
FREE
Rated 5 out of 5, based on 1 reviews
5.0 (1)
Showing 1-13 of 13 results
TPT is the largest marketplace for PreK-12 resources, powered by a community of educators.