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Catch Up: Helping Students Understand the Importance of Completing Work

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Teacher to Teacher Press
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Grade Levels
5th - 10th
Resource Type
Standards
Formats Included
  • PDF
Pages
11 pages
$4.99
$4.99
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Teacher to Teacher Press
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Description

If you want to reinforce the importance of doing work this is a powerful way to accomplish your goal while teaching t-tables, graphing, patterns, and functions. Students typically don’t realize how important each assignment is to the outcome of their grade. With this activity, they will see its impact and remember it for months to come. A great way to start your school year or a new grading period.
Total Pages
11 pages
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
2 days
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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Use a pair of perpendicular number lines, called axes, to define a coordinate system, with the intersection of the lines (the origin) arranged to coincide with the 0 on each line and a given point in the plane located by using an ordered pair of numbers, called its coordinates. Understand that the first number indicates how far to travel from the origin in the direction of one axis, and the second number indicates how far to travel in the direction of the second axis, with the convention that the names of the two axes and the coordinates correspond (e.g., 𝘹-axis and 𝘹-coordinate, 𝘺-axis and 𝘺-coordinate).
Represent real world and mathematical problems by graphing points in the first quadrant of the coordinate plane, and interpret coordinate values of points in the context of the situation.
Understand that a function is a rule that assigns to each input exactly one output. The graph of a function is the set of ordered pairs consisting of an input and the corresponding output.
Compare properties of two functions each represented in a different way (algebraically, graphically, numerically in tables, or by verbal descriptions). For example, given a linear function represented by a table of values and a linear function represented by an algebraic expression, determine which function has the greater rate of change.
Understand that a function from one set (called the domain) to another set (called the range) assigns to each element of the domain exactly one element of the range. If 𝘧 is a function and 𝘹 is an element of its domain, then 𝘧(𝘹) denotes the output of 𝘧 corresponding to the input 𝘹. The graph of 𝘧 is the graph of the equation 𝘺 = 𝘧(𝘹).

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