Lesson plan - Study Island
|Math Lesson: Simplifying Expressions |Grade Level: 7 |
|Lesson Summary: |
|Students review properties of arithmetic operations, and then relate concepts to simplifying expressions with integers, rational numbers, and variables. Students |
|simplify a number of expressions as a class, and then students take turns writing simple expressions for partners to simplify. Advanced students are challenged to |
|create equations with rational numbers that represent each of the properties. Struggling students create examples of each property using integers. |
|Lesson Objectives: |
|The students will know… |
|that the properties of operations can be used as strategies to simplify expressions. |
|The students will be able to… |
|apply the properties of operations to simplify expressions. |
|simplify expressions with fractions, decimals, integers, and variables. |
|Learning Styles Targeted: |
| |
| |
|Visual |
| |
|Auditory |
| |
|Kinesthetic/Tactile |
| |
|Pre-Assessment: |
|Write the following equations on the board, and then ask students to explain the properties that each represents: |
|3 + 2 = 2 + 3 and 3 × 2 = 2 × 3 [Commutative property: the order in which two numbers are added or multiplied does not matter.] |
|(3 + 2) + 4 = 3 + (2 + 4) and (3 × 2) × 4 = 3 × (2 × 4) [Associative property: when three or more numbers are added or multiplied, the answer is the same |
|regardless of the grouping of the factors.] |
|(12 ÷ 4) = (8 ÷ 4) + (4 ÷ 4) [Distributive property over addition: the factors in addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division can be decomposed and |
|operated on individually and then added together.] |
|3 – 2 = 1 and 2 + 1 = 3 and 6 ÷ 2 = 3 and 3 × 2 = 6 [Inverse operations of addition and subtraction and multiplication and division] |
|3 × 1 = 3 and 3 ÷ 1 = 3 [Identity property: any number multiplied or divided by 1 is itself.] |
|3 + 0 = 0 and 3 – 0 = 3 [Zero property of addition and subtraction/Identity property of addition] |
|3 × 0 = 0 [Zero property of multiplication] |
|Leave the equations on the board for use in the following activities. |
|Note students who appear to have little awareness of the properties of arithmetic. |
|Whole-Class Instruction |
|Materials Needed: None |
|Procedure: |
|Presentation |
|Henry David Thoreau, a famous writer and philosopher of the 19th century, said, “Our life is frittered away by detail. Simplify. Simplify.” To simplify an |
|expression or an equation in mathematics, you need to eliminate the detail by combining, calculating, and reducing so that it is easier to solve. The properties of|
|arithmetic and algebra help do that. |
|Ask students about a time they had to clean up a big mess. How did they go about it? [By organizing, sorting, and combining.] |
|Write this expression on the board (6 × 2) + 5 + (3 × 2) + 2. Have students devise their own methods to simplify the expression. Discuss how students simplified |
|the expression and record different approaches on the board. |
|Some may have multiplied 9 × 2 and added 7 because the distributive property allows the combination of numbers for multiplication. The associative property allows |
|the addition of numbers in any order. |
|Some may have multiplied 6 × 2 and added 5 to equal 17 and then calculated 6 + 2. |
|Consider how each of the following strategies could be used to simplify an expression. |
|Rewrite the expression so like terms are grouped together. For example, 3x + 5y + 2x – 6y can be rearranged to form the expression 3x + 2x + 5y – 6y using the |
|commutative property. |
|Simplify the expression by adding/subtracting the coefficients (numbers partnered with variables) of like terms. So, the expression 3x + 2x + 5y – 6y can be |
|simplified to |
|(3 + 2)x + (5 – 6)y = 5x + (-y) = 5x – y. |
|Refer students to the properties of arithmetic from the Pre-Assessment activity. Explain that those properties are actually algebraic laws that they have been |
|using when they add, subtract, multiply, and divide. Those same properties apply in algebra even when there are variables. |
|Now write this expression on the board, and ask students to use the distributive property to simplify it: 5(x + 14) [5x + 70]. Explain that x can represent any |
|number because it is a variable. |
|Next write each expression and work together to simplify them, asking students to explain their reasoning and identifying the fraction bar as the division sign and|
|using the order of operations correctly. |
|[pic] [pic] |
|x(5 + 3) [8x] |
|(17 × 18) + (3 × 18) [360] |
|3.3 + 3(6)(5 - 1) - 2 [73.3] |
| |
|Guided Practice |
|Write the following expressions on the board and have students reason through combining terms to simplify each expression. |
|1.7x + (39x)(5.6) [220.1x] |
|[pic] [pic] |
|[pic] [pic] |
|[pic] [pic] |
|[pic] [pic] |
|Confirm that only like terms can be combined, and the coefficients can be combined without affecting the value of the variables. |
| |
|Independent Practice |
|Divide the class into pairs. Give students five minutes to take turns in which one person writes an algebraic expression that includes rational numbers (for |
|example, [pic] or |
|[pic]) and the other person simplifies it. Remind students to only combine or simplify like terms. |
|Have students in each group present one expression and how it was simplified and have them defend their reasoning. |
| |
|Closing Activity |
|Refer back to the Pre-Assessment activity, and ask students how they used the properties of arithmetic to simplify the expressions. |
|Advanced Learner |
|Simplifying Expressions Using Properties |
|Materials: None |
|Procedure: |
|Challenge students to create equations with rational numbers, variables, and coefficients that demonstrate each of the properties of algebra covered in the lesson.|
| |
|Review results and have students explain their reasoning. |
|Struggling Learner |
|Translate into Symbols |
|Materials: None |
|Procedure: |
|Have students create an example of each of the properties using integers, and then compare their results and explain their reasoning. |
*see supplemental resources
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