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HOLIDAY MATH, UNIT RATE, PERCENTS, EQUATIONS, EXPRESSIONS, DISTRIBUTIVE PROPERT

Rated 4.83 out of 5, based on 86 reviews
4.8 (86 ratings)
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The Morehouse Magic
11.3k Followers
Grade Levels
6th - 8th, Homeschool
Resource Type
Standards
Formats Included
  • PDF
Pages
12 pages
$6.50
List Price:
$9.00
You Save:
$2.50
$6.50
List Price:
$9.00
You Save:
$2.50
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The Morehouse Magic
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Description

This is a set of six math hidden message puzzles (with really bad puns, yikes!) These would be great for review, early finishers, homework, or just a fun day! Topics covered are writing and evaluating expressions, tax rate, sale price, combining like terms, distributive property, one step equations, unit rate, and is/of percentage problems.

Each puzzle also inlcudes a small amount of black and white clip art that students can spend a few minutes coloring. Middle schoolers still love to color!

Save 25% by buying all six! These items can also be viewed and purchased separately here:

❄️ Gingerbread Man puzzle/key – rate & unit rate word problems
❄️ Santa Claus puzzle/key – writing and solving one-step equations from words
❄️ Santa’s Elf puzzle/key – writing and solving is/of percentage problems
❄️ Snowman puzzle/key – combining like terms and evaluating expressions
❄️ Rudolph puzzle/key – calculating tax and total price
❄️ Penguin puzzle/key – distributive property and evaluating expressions


If you like this packet you may also like my other Christmas math activity:

Christmas Cookie Equations


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Total Pages
12 pages
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
N/A
Last updated Nov 29th, 2014
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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Apply the properties of operations to generate equivalent expressions. For example, apply the distributive property to the expression 3 (2 + 𝘹) to produce the equivalent expression 6 + 3𝘹; apply the distributive property to the expression 24𝘹 + 18𝘺 to produce the equivalent expression 6 (4𝘹 + 3𝘺); apply properties of operations to 𝘺 + 𝘺 + 𝘺 to produce the equivalent expression 3𝘺.
Use variables to represent numbers and write expressions when solving a real-world or mathematical problem; understand that a variable can represent an unknown number, or, depending on the purpose at hand, any number in a specified set.
Apply properties of operations as strategies to add, subtract, factor, and expand linear expressions with rational coefficients.
Use variables to represent quantities in a real-world or mathematical problem, and construct simple equations and inequalities to solve problems by reasoning about the quantities.
Solve unit rate problems including those involving unit pricing and constant speed. For example, if it took 7 hours to mow 4 lawns, then at that rate, how many lawns could be mowed in 35 hours? At what rate were lawns being mowed?

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