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6th Grade Math Activities Digital Escape Room Games Holiday & Seasonal Bundles

Rated 4.71 out of 5, based on 24 reviews
4.7 (24 ratings)
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The Great Classroom Escape
2.2k Followers
Grade Levels
5th - 7th, Homeschool
Resource Type
Standards
Formats Included
  • Zip
  • Google Apps™
Pages
6 Google Forms™ Escape Rooms + PDF Extras
$23.56
List Price:
$29.45
You Save:
$5.89
Bundle
$23.56
List Price:
$29.45
You Save:
$5.89
Bundle
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The Great Classroom Escape
2.2k Followers
Includes Google Apps™
This bundle contains one or more resources with Google apps (e.g. docs, slides, etc.).
Easel Activities Included
Some resources in this bundle include ready-to-use interactive activities that students can complete on any device.  Easel by TPT is free to use! Learn more.

Products in this Bundle (6)

    showing 1-5 of 6 products

    Bonus

    Lemonade Stand Logic Puzzles with Absolute Value and Integers

    Description

    It's hard to keep students engaged before holidays and vacations. These digital breakouts for sixth grade math skills keep kids focused reviewing important math standards. Best of all, they are easy for teachers to implement! All of these online escape rooms are automated by a Google Form™. There are no clues for teachers to hide, and the form will not allow students to progress to the next clue until the correct answers are entered. Note that this does NOT require Google Drive™ or e-mail addresses for students. Anyone with internet access and a computer or tablet can complete these digital breakouts!

    ★Kick off the school year with a fun and engaging review of 5th grade math skills in Escape the Deserted Island! Adding & subtracting fractions with unlike denominators, finding points in the first quadrant of the coordinate plane, & evaluating expressions are just a few of the skills students will need to escape.

    ★During Halloween season (or any time), your students will be racing to escape Horatio's Haunted House by reasoning with rates and ratios, completing ratio tables, graphing, reasoning with tape diagrams, and more.

    ★Do your sixth graders have what it takes to save Thanksgiving dinner? They will need to perform all four operations with decimals, evaluate expressions with exponents using the order of operations, multiply and divide fractions, solve multi-step word problems, and complete logic puzzles.

    ★Before winter break (or any time), Revenge of the Gingerbread Man will have students racing to escape a bakery by working with decimals and exponents, using order of operations, solving logic puzzles, working out multi-step word problems, and much more.

    ★When the Valentine's Villain steals all of the candy, it will be up to your class to save the day by ordering rational numbers; finding the greatest common factor and least common multiple; finding percents; solving ratio and rate word problems, and much more.

    ★It's time for summer vacation, but you are stuck in a time warp! Can your students activate a scientist's time machine to save summer vacation? They will be comparing the value of negative numbers; comparing the value of number opposites and absolute value; distributing and combining like terms to match equivalent expressions with variables, finding the area of a composite shapes, and more. Please note that this IS NOT a comprehensive review of all sixth grade standards.

    *This is not a growing bundle! While I may occasionally add a product, not all 6th grade holiday escape rooms will be included (for example, escape rooms for religious holidays such as Christmas or Easter will not be included in this bundle as they are not able to be used by many teachers).

    Escape rooms are a great way to encourage collaboration, review skills, provide enrichment, and keep kids actively engaged!

    What's included in the PDFs?

    • Quickstart guide
    • Detailed instructions & tips
    • Printable intro page with QR code to access the Google Form™ (optional)
    • URL to access the Google Form™.
    • Detailed answer key
    • Success signs to snap photos with after completing the activity (optional)
    • Optional link for Google Drive™ users to create a copy of the form to save to their own drives in order to view student results.

    FAQ

    • Do students need to have Gmail™ accounts? NO! Anyone with internet access and a tablet, computer, or even phone can complete the breakout.
    • How long will this take? Most students will be able to complete these activities in under 45 minutes. You can allow 60 minutes to be safe. The form will not save student data, so if you are worried about your students not finishing on time, simply have them write their answers on scratch paper. They can then come back and quickly re-enter their answers and pick up where they left off.
    • Will students have to search the web to figure out the puzzles? NO! All of the information needed will be provided in the Google Form™. The math in this activity is all standards-based.

    Follow us to be the first to know when creative math games and activities arrive!

    View all of The Great Classroom Escape's Sixth Grade Math Activities

    Total Pages
    6 Google Forms™ Escape Rooms + PDF Extras
    Answer Key
    Included
    Teaching Duration
    N/A
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    Standards

    to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
    Find the area of right triangles, other triangles, special quadrilaterals, and polygons by composing into rectangles or decomposing into triangles and other shapes; apply these techniques in the context of solving real-world and mathematical problems.
    Interpret and compute quotients of fractions, and solve word problems involving division of fractions by fractions, e.g., by using visual fraction models and equations to represent the problem. For example, create a story context for (2/3) ÷ (3/4) and use a visual fraction model to show the quotient; use the relationship between multiplication and division to explain that (2/3) ÷ (3/4) = 8/9 because 3/4 of 8/9 is 2/3. (In general, (𝘢/𝘣) ÷ (𝘤/𝘥) = 𝘢𝘥/𝘣𝘤.) How much chocolate will each person get if 3 people share 1/2 lb of chocolate equally? How many 3/4-cup servings are in 2/3 of a cup of yogurt? How wide is a rectangular strip of land with length 3/4 mi and area 1/2 square mi?
    Fluently add, subtract, multiply, and divide multi-digit decimals using the standard algorithm for each operation.
    Find the greatest common factor of two whole numbers less than or equal to 100 and the least common multiple of two whole numbers less than or equal to 12. Use the distributive property to express a sum of two whole numbers 1–100 with a common factor as a multiple of a sum of two whole numbers with no common factor. For example, express 36 + 8 as 4 (9 + 2).
    Understand that positive and negative numbers are used together to describe quantities having opposite directions or values (e.g., temperature above/below zero, elevation above/below sea level, credits/debits, positive/negative electric charge); use positive and negative numbers to represent quantities in real-world contexts, explaining the meaning of 0 in each situation.

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