Linear Inequalities

This packet is designed to place in your, the teacher’s, hands, everything needed to teach students about slope intercept form and also tie in some approaches students can use to decide the most effective method of graphing a linear equation. Students need to understand various ways of collecting information required to graph a linear equation. They need either two points, or a point and a slope, except in the cases where the line is horizontal or vertical.  Slope – Intercept Form provides students with a starting point (the y – intercept) and the slope.

Students will:

1.    Graph a line given a point and a slope

2.    Graph a line given two points

3.    Graph a line from slope – intercept form

4.    Find the intercepts from slope – intercept form

 

When you download this bundle you’ll receive a zip folder with a Read Me document that organizes all of the documents within, making deploying the lessons easy.  (You can see how this document looks from the picture posted below.)  The folder also includes a high quality, well organized, a teacher’s companion that breaks down the key concepts and provides focus for your instruction, a high quality, PowerPoint, reference notes to assign for student reading or reference, one homework assignment, and links to internet hosted information aligned with this lesson for student or parent reference.   There are two homework assignments.  The online information includes videos, online notes, an activity with Desmos.com, and practice problems from Khan Academy.

As is the case with all of the bundles and lessons from Math Connected, you can use the materials easily in a traditional lesson, a flipped classroom setting, or a virtual classroom.   If you assign the notes to be read by the students, they’ll further develop their literacy and experience with technical writing.  Either way, they’re a great reference for students.

All of the materials here are aligned in a way that you can support students of various abilities, while providing access to content for review or for absent students, and even parents that want to have access so they can “help,” their child perform well in class.

As is the case with all of the bundles and lessons from Math Connected, you can use the materials easily in a traditional lesson, a flipped classroom setting, or a virtual classroom.   If you assign the notes to be read by the students, they’ll further develop their literacy and experience with technical writing.  Either way, they’re a great reference for students.

All of the materials here are aligned in a way that you can support students of various abilities, while providing access to content for review or for absent students, and even parents that want to have access so they can “help,” their child

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Description

This packet is designed to place in your, the teacher’s, hands, everything needed to teach students about manipulating, graphing and writing linear inequalities in two variables.  The concepts here with shading, dotted line versus solid line, and a graph being a picture of all solutions all tie into prior learning.  This is a good way to help students shore up misconceptions and develop an easily recalled new application of an old concept and procedure.

Students will:

1.    Write linear inequalities given a graph

2.    Graph linear inequalities

 

When you download this bundle you’ll receive a zip folder with a Read Me document that organizes all of the documents within, making deploying the lessons easy.  (You can see how this document looks from the picture posted below.)  The folder also includes a high quality, well organized, a teacher’s companion that breaks down the key concepts and provides focus for your instruction, a high quality, PowerPoint, reference notes to assign for student reading or reference, one homework assignment, and links to internet hosted information aligned with this lesson for student or parent reference.   There are two homework assignments.  The online information includes videos, online notes, an activity with Desmos.com, and practice problems from Khan Academy.

As is the case with all of the bundles and lessons from Math Connected, you can use the materials easily in a traditional lesson, a flipped classroom setting, or a virtual classroom.   If you assign the notes to be read by the students, they’ll further develop their literacy and experience with technical writing.  Either way, they’re a great reference for students.

All of the materials here are aligned in a way that you can support students of various abilities, while providing access to content for review or for absent students, and even parents that want to have access so they can “help,” their child perform well in class.

 

 

 

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