Domain and Range Finder Tools


Do your students struggle finding domain and range of graphs? I made a couple printable domain and range tools to help our students this year.



There are directions pointing students to look at x for domain and y for range as they drag each tool across the graphs. There are also directions printed on the tool for what to record for domain and range when a graph has an arrow.




We have always used rulers to find where graphs start and stop, but I wanted something a bit more self-teaching for our students this year. The graph cards in the photo are a free download on my blog here.


You can find the domain and range finder tools here on my website.



I also made a new domain and range of graphs cheat sheet for our students that you can find here in my drive.




UPDATE: A 3rd tool for finding increasing/decreasing intervals of graphs has been added to the file linked below.


> Browse all domain and range activities


Domain & Range Finder Tools


2 free factoring quadratic trinomial cheat sheets


How do I factor a quadratic trinomial? In this post are linked 2 free reference sheets for help with factoring quadratic trinomials.

What's your favorite method for factoring quadratic trinomials? For me, it's the AC method with grouping because there's no guess and check, which frustrated me as a high school student. I remember endlessly erasing my work, and settling with "close enough" on some problems. The box, or area, method has grown on me over the years, especially how it links back to multiplying polynomials.


The structure of the AC method works for me, and is the method I have used most when teaching students to factor. I don't know when I learned it, but I remember thinking that it would have been a helpful tool for me in high school. If making the list of factors is difficult, students can divide AC with 2, 3, 4, ... with a calculator and write down any quotients without decimals, checking which factor pair adds to B.


I made a couple factoring quadratics cheat sheets and posted them on Facebook this week.


We're getting to factoring in a few weeks after imaginary number operations, Quadratic Formula and solving with square roots and we're going to teach the kids the box (area) method, which they may have seen in algebra 1. AC with grouping will be the backup plan for students who aren't clicking with the box method. Multiplication charts will also be available to students who need them.


algebra reference sheet for the box, or area, method of factoring quadratic trinomials

Box method factoring


algebra reference sheet for the AC with grouping method of factoring quadratic trinomials

AC method with grouping


If you are teaching factoring this year, I wanted to share the two cheat sheets above in case you find them helpful. I also wanted to mention that the cheat sheets I share are never intended to be standalone teaching tools. They always go along with lessons as a way to help students through independent work. This was something that came up this week, too. 



> Browse all Quadratics activities



You can download the two factoring cheat sheets here from my Google Drive.



free math resource library



 

Function Composition Cheat Sheet

In this post is a free composition of functions reference sheet for your algebra 2 students.


We've been working on composition of functions in algebra 2 the last couple weeks, and some students are still having a hard time with composing functions shown in graphs and equations. We're also seeing a few students looking at the y column in tables when evaluating functions shown in tables.




There are a bunch of free math cheat sheets on my blog here, and I wanted to add another one for composing functions.


How to Make Any Math Word Problem Solvable for Students

How to Make Any Math Word Problem Solvable for Students


Solving math word problems is tricky for students whether they are in 3rd grade using multiplication, in middle school solving ratios, or in high school working through quadratic word problems. If you're looking to support students through solving word problems, this math bulletin board set is a guide to solving any math word problem students will see throughout school.


The bulletin board posters are written in simple language so that all students can access the information and outline five steps in the solving process. 




1: UNDERSTANDING 

This step asks students if they understand what is being asked of them to solve and if they understand all of the vocabulary in the word problem. 


2: PROCESSING 

This step asks students if they are able to restate the problem in their own words, if they can draw a picture, if they can make an easier example, and if it's possible to add their own name into the word problem. This always seems to make word problems easier! 


3: PLANNING 

In this step, students make a plan to solve their word problem. Strategies include writing an equation, using reasoning, making a list, finding a pattern, etc. 


4: SOLVING 

Students always want to jump to solving, so they'll begin to see that solving can only come after a plan has been put in place. This step asks students to go ahead with their plan, and if their plan fails to try a new plan. Most important is staying persistent. 


5: LOOKING AHEAD 

This final step asks students to think ahead to when they might see a similar problem and to consider what approach might be best then. 


You can find this math word problems bulletin board set here.


Math Word Problems Strategies & Guide Bulletin Board Posters
Math Word Problems Bulletin Board


> Browse word problem activities.



More posts:


Math Classroom Decoration Ideas


Math Word Walls



Consumer Math Curriculum Warm-Ups 18 Units of Financial Literacy Bell Ringers

Consumer Math Curriculum Warm-Ups 18 Units of Financial Literacy Bell Ringers


Do you start math class with a warm-up or a bell ringer? My classes started going more smoothly once I got my warm-up routine down. 


Our classroom routine: 

Students enter our classroom and grab a warm-up out of the basket at the front of the classroom. The warm-ups were either a 1/2-sheet or 1/4-sheet of paper and would get glued into their interactive notebooks or on binder paper. Students get time to work on their warm-up independently before we go over the answers together to make sure we were all on the same page.


18 units of Consumer Math Curriculum Warm-Ups


Sometimes if students weren't focused, I'd switch gears and collect the warm-ups for points. This kept students on their toes. I'd only ever do this when the warm-up was a spiral review of material students had recently learned. This was usually the case with our warm-ups-- they'd be a short review of previous material before moving on to learn new math concepts.


Consumer Math Curriculum bell ringers 18 units


I put together an 18-unit pack of consumer math warm-ups to get students thinking about real-world math as soon as they sit down for class. There are at least 6 warm-ups included for each curriculum unit listed below, along with answer keys:


18 units of consumer math warm-ups: 

  • Wants vs. needs 
  • Checks and registers 
  • Wages and salary 
  • Bank accounts 
  • Budgets 
  • Electronic banking and credit cards 
  • Credit score 
  • Discounts and coupons 
  • Sales tax and tip 
  • Percent change 
  • Unit price 
  • Income taxes 
  • Car loans 
  • Mortgages 
  • Student loans 
  • Investing 
  • Car insurance 
  • Health insurance


Consumer Math Curriculum Warm-Ups

The warm-ups are all sized to be cut and pasted into an interactive math notebook. Students answer their warm-ups on their notebook paper, discuss with each other and report out on their answers to create a classroom discussion. These are the same warm-ups included in the Scaffolded Consumer Math Curriculum.



BROWSE MORE CONSUMER MATH



First Week of School in the Math Classroom


Do you have any math activities planned for the first day of school? In this post are a few back to school math activity ideas and classroom resources to help students ease into the new school year.


Editable Back to School Standing Desk Plate Get-to-Know-You Math Activity
Editable Back to School Desk Plate


Students get to know each other through numbers with this back to school math desk plate activity. Students answer 10 questions about themselves that are all answered with numbers. The questions are ell editable, so you can change them to match what you'd like to know about students at the beginning of the school year.


Golden Spiral Back to School Math Pennant Activity
Golden Spiral Back to School Math Pennant


Students color the different sections of their back to school math pennants based on their answers to questions like "favorite class?" and "birth month?" When all colored in, the final pennants make colorful math classroom décor that can be displayed for back to school night.


Back to School Picture Puzzles Digital Math Escape Room Activity
Back to School Picture Puzzles Escape Room


Braking free from this math picture puzzles escape room is a fun way for students to get to know each other while working together on the first day of school. To move to each next puzzle, students have to solve for the values of school-themes pictures and type the correct 4-letter code.


Back to School Picture Puzzles Digital Math Escape Room Activity printable PDF version
Back to School Picture Puzzles Escape Room


Graphing algebraic function transformations with cut paper videos

In this post are short videos showing algebraic function transformations using cut paper. a free printable PDF cheat sheet and an explanation as to why "inside is opposite" for horizontal function transformations.

In this post are a bunch of function transformations videos showing how vertex form functions all transform using the same pattern. The way that functions transform in the coordinate plane can feel pretty abstract to algebra 2 students just learning about nonlinear functions. But every algebraic function in vertex form transforms the exact same way.



Functions can translate vertically and horizontally, and even reflect over the x and y axes just like geometric shapesThe one quirk is that horizontal transformations feel opposite from expected. 


Why are horizontal transformations opposite? It feels backwards for the vertex of y = |x - 3| to translate right 3 units. With all horizontal shifts, we're looking for the value of x that will "zero out" the inside expression. For x - 3 = 0, x would need to be 3. With x gone, we can find the function's lowest or highest y value, i.e. the vertex's y value.



Here is how we can find the horizontal transformation of a quadratic function in vertex form and why the inside shift is opposite. 


free function transformations cheat sheet for absolute value, quadratic and radical graphs
function transformations cheat sheet


This function transformations cheat sheet in my Google Drive has graphics from an algebra 2 word wall for absolute value, quadratic and square root graphs. There's also a free set of dancing skeleton functions posters here.


Below are a bunch of function transformation video shorts using cut paper. In each video you'll see familiar nonlinear algebraic functions transformed in the coordinate plane.