Math Content Academy Summit April 2025
Spring Math Picture Puzzles Escape Room
Students add, subtract, multiply and divide to figure out the values of spring pictures. The escape room comes in both a digital version in Google Forms, and a printable version. It's a fun brain break, or can be left with a sub on a day you will not be at school.
There is an answer 1/2-sheet and graphic organizer included in the file for students to keep track of their work and the pictures' values. An answer key is also included.
You can find the spring math escape room here: Spring math picture puzzles escape room
Happy spring!
Browse all spring math activities
Katherine Johnson Color-By-Number Math Activity (free)
Mathematician Katherine Johnson was a trailblazing NASA scientist back in the 1950s and 60s. Her work was so important that after NASA started using computers in the late 1950s, astronaut John Glenn refused to fly on his 1962 orbit around the Earth until Johnson checked the computer's calculations by hand. She was invaluable to NASA and to the US space program for 33 years.
To give students a way to learn learn more about Katherine Johnson's life, I put together a 2-step equations color-by-number activity. The activity is editable if you would like to change any of the equations or facts for your students. You can access the activity for free here.
"We needed to be assertive as women in that days – assertive and aggressive – and the degree to which we had to be that way depended on where you were. I had to be. In the early days of NASA women were not allowed to put their names on the reports – no woman in my division had had her name on a report. I was working with Ted Skopinski and he wanted to leave and go to Houston, but Henry Pearson, our supervisor – he was not a fan of women – kept pushing him to finish the report we were working on. Finally, Ted told him, "Katherine should finish the report, she's done most of the work anyway." So Ted left Pearson with no choice; I finished the report and my name went on it, and that was the first time a woman in our division had her name on something."
- Katherine Johnson, Black Women Scientists in the United States, Indiana University Press, 1999
Pi Day Math Worksheets
It was February break here this past week, so I rested a lot and worked on a pack of 16 math worksheets for Pi Day. The worksheets include:
- Pi Day word search (2 levels)
- Puzzle sheet #1 (2 levels) - number puzzles and maze
- Puzzle sheet #2 - number puzzles and maze
- Puzzle sheet #3 - number puzzles and maze
- Order of operations sheet to solve for missing digits of pi
- 2-step equations sheet to learn about Albert Einstein
- Circles sheet for area and circumference (2 versions - 3.14 and pi button)
- Cylinders sheet for volume (2 versions - 3.14 and pi button)
- Cones sheet for volume (2 versions - 3.14 and pi button)
- Spheres sheet to solve for radius given volume or surface area
- Pi Day coloring sheet with Albert Einstein
Details:
The circle, cylinder and cone sheets come in 2 versions-- one for using 3.14 and one for using the calculator's pi button.
There are 2 versions of the word search, both with 15 Pi Day themed words to find. One word search has a 20x20 letter grid, and the other has a 15x15 letter grid. The words are the same between the two versions.
The puzzle sheets include number puzzles, picture puzzles and mazes. The number puzzles ask students to use the order of operations, arrange given numbers into a grid to make sums, arrange operations around four 4s to make given numbers, and figure out missing numbers in crossword-like puzzles.
Students simplify expressions with addition, subtraction, multiplication, division and groupings on the order of operations sheet. Answers fill in missing digits of pi to the 35th digit.
The 2-step equations sheet asks students to solve equations to figure out the missing numbers in facts about Albert Einstein's life.,
The last page is a Pi Day coloring sheet for all ages featuring Albert Einstein.
You can see all of the worksheets included here:
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Pi Day math worksheets |
Digital Math Escape Room Holiday Activity Bundle
This bundle of holiday digital math escape rooms will engage your students around the holidays while being a breeze to assign.
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Valentine's Day digital |
Each math escape room inside comes as a self-checking Google Form, and as a printable black & white PDF.
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Valentine's Day printable |
Each escape room has 20 questions broken into 5 puzzles. Students solve each problem, then type the correct 4-letter code to move to the next puzzle.
There are 3,024 possible 4-letter codes for each puzzle, so the chance of guessing correctly is pretty low!
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Football Game Day escape room |
There are 2 types of escape rooms in this bundle:
In the logic picture puzzle escape rooms, students solve for the values of holiday-themed pictures in equations.
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Christmas cookies escape room |
These come with a student graphic organizer to help students keep track of the values of the different pictures.
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Halloween escape room |
There are also 2 escape rooms especially for Pi Day where students solve for variables in the circle and volume formulas.
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Pi Day escape room - middle school |
One Pi Day escape room is geared towards middle school students, while the other can be completed by students in 8th grade and up.
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Pi Day escape room - 8th and up |
Each escape room includes a link to its digital version in Google Forms, a printable black & white version, a printable student answer sheet and an answer key. The picture puzzle logic escape rooms also include a printable graphic organizer to help students keep track of each pictures' value.
To add the digital escape rooms to your Google Drive: please open its PDF and click the button on page 3. Each escape room also comes with a printable, black & white PDF version for days you'd rather work on paper.
Inside this bundle are digital math escape rooms for Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, winter, Valentine's Day, and Pi Day. And the bundle is still growing! All future additions are free to download. What other holidays would you like to see?
Digital Math Escape Room Holiday Activity Bundle
Browse all non-holiday math escape rooms
Fun activities for teaching systems of equations
Which is your favorite method for solving systems of equations-- graphing, substitution or elimination? Solving by elimination always feels a bit like magic to me, and I love how solving with substitution brings in the transitive property. There's something satisfying about solving a system with graphing and finding the exact coordinate both lines pass through.
In this post are a bunch of activities for teaching solving equations by graphing, substitution and elimination.
First I want to share a few systems of equations emoji posters. The posters are here in my Google Drive. Two of the posters use emoji smiley faces to show solving systems of equations with substitution, and the third poster shows solving systems with elimination.
Drake loves systems of equations, but only picture systems. If you like these types of picture puzzles and are on Pinterest, I've been collecting them on this Pinterest board.
This systems of equations math pennant activity has students solving systems by graphing. Their completed pennants then become student-made classroom décor. There's another set of pennants for solving systems using elimination and substitution.
We only ever focused on solving systems of linear equations, but I know some curriculums have students solving systems where one of the lines is a quadratic. This systems scavenger hunt has students walking around the room solving systems of linear and quadratic equations while working in some movement. Students can start on any of the scavenger hunt cards. They solve, find their answer at the top of another card in the room, then solve that system and continue until they have visited all cards.
I'm not a huge fan of board games except if they are collaborative games where players team up against the board. It's not that I hate losing, I actually don't like winning. I always feel bad for beating the other person. Weird. This systems of equations game has students working together to solve systems of equations and beat the math monster to the treasure.
The winter holidays just passed as I'm writing this post, though it's still absolutely freezing outside. My daughter has had indoor recess all week. These winter holiday systems ornaments ask students to solve systems of equations by graphing, substitution and elimination. Their decorated ornaments make a festive classroom display.
This systems escape room covers substitution, elimination and graphing in an answer-validated Google Form. Students solve their systems, then type the correct 4-letter code to move to the next puzzle. Each puzzle has 3,024 possible 4-letter code combinations, so the likelihood of students correctly guessing the code is slim. The activity also comes printable in the file.
We used these systems of equations word problem cards in my small group algebra 2 class. All systems can be solved using elimination (some of the systems need to be multiplied through first).
During our systems of equations unit, we'd also use this free systems template in my small group algebra 2 class. Students grabbed a template as they walked into the classroom, then looked to the board for what to do next. Most of the time I'd give them a system of equations to graph and solve, but sometimes I'd give two lines and ask them to find their equations.
These systems of equations references are part of an 8th grade math word wall and cover no solution, infinite solutions and one solution. The equations' tables are proportional and non-proportional, so that vocabulary is also included in this section.
Systems of equations including a linear/quadratic system are included as part of an algebra word wall where substitution and elimination are linked to graphing.
> Browse more systems of equations activities here.
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Free math resource library |
2025 consumer math curriculum update
All W-2, W-4, 1040 and Schedule 1 images in the curriculum have been updated in the student book, teacher book, student notebook sheets, PowerPoints, warm-ups and quizzes. All answer keys and completed 1040s have been updated to reflect this year's numbers.
For tax year 2024, the Standard Deduction for single people increased from $13,850 to $14,600, and the additional amount added to a dependent's income on the dependents worksheet (Publication 501, Table 8) increased from $400 to $450, if they earned less than the Standard Deduction.
Some years the 1040 has changed significantly, other years it barely changes. In 2018, the 1040 was suddenly a lot shorter than previous years, but it grew back to its present size by 2022. I keep a free 1040 cheat sheet updated here every year. It's set up to help working teens file their federal income tax returns, but it can also be used for simple tax returns.
You can read more about what is included in the consumer math curriculum here on my blog.
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consumer math |
Please send me an email to shana@scaffoldedmath.com if you have any trouble getting into your account or downloading the files.
Volume discovery lesson using kinetic sand - cylinders, cones, prisms and pyramids
This year I am tutoring kids to pass our state math and biology tests. Here in Massachusetts, the MCAS has been in place since 1993 and a graduation requirement for around 20 years.
In November 2024, the graduation requirement was repealed, and districts are currently putting new competency standards in place. Most of my students are still coming to tutoring, and now we're allowed to have a bit more fun than just practicing on old MCAS exams. Students will still take the MCAS, it just won't prevent them from getting a diploma anymore.
The MCAS allows students a reference sheet of formulas. As is often the case, the fractions in the volume formulas can be confusing, so we did a discovery lesson. I've seen volume discovery lessons, so what we did was nothing new, but it worked so well that I wanted to share with you in case your students also struggle with the 1/3 in the pyramid and cone formulas.
Needed for this lesson: a bag of kinetic sand and a box of fillable plastic 3D shapes. I got both on Amazon. The lesson plan with worksheets for follow up is a free download here.
I wrote the volume formulas for cylinder, cone, prism and pyramid on the board, along a couple questions:
- How many cones fit into a cylinder?
- How many pyramids fit into a prism?
We used the cube as a prism because it has the same base and height as the pyramid. The cone and cylinder have the same dimensions.
Next comes the fun part. Students fill the cone with sand and transfer the sand to the cylinder to find that 3 cones fill up a cylinder. They did the same for pyramid and prism (cube).
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follow up worksheets |
We go back to the questions written on the board and students can easily answer them. We then discuss how we can go from the prism/cylinder formulas to the pyramid/cone formulas with division, and that dividing by 3 is the same as multiplying by 1/3. Then students complete a couple follow up worksheets. Wouldn't it be great if the formulas used division instead fractions?
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Free volume discovery lesson plan and worksheets |
You can get the free, editable lesson plan and worksheets here.
More posts:
Teaching Volume and Surface Area with Interactive Materials
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Free math resource library |