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Area and Perimeter Practice Activities | Bundle

Rated 4.89 out of 5, based on 29 reviews
4.9 (29 ratings)
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Math Nut
3.1k Followers
Grade Levels
3rd - 10th, Homeschool
Subjects
Resource Type
Standards
Formats Included
  • Zip
Pages
149 pages
$13.50
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$18.00
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Bundle
$13.50
List Price:
$18.00
You Save:
$4.50
Bundle
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Math Nut
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Products in this Bundle (4)

    Description

    Area and Perimeter Bundle contains 4 complete resources. This set has a HUGE variety of task cards designed for practice, review, RTI intervention, and math centers. It contains 8 worksheets in which students find the area and perimeter of rectangles. This set includes real-world word problems providing higher DOK depth of knowledge. Introduce area and perimeter using the included lesson designed to accompany Marilyn Burn's math literature book Spaghetti and Meatball for All! This bundle contains my student and teacher approved snowball fight game!

    This bundle contains the following Area and Perimeter resources:

    Area and Perimeter Game and Differentiated Instruction

    Area and Perimeter Centers

    Area and Perimeter Lesson Combining Literature and Math

    Constructing Area and Perimeter

    Total Pages
    149 pages
    Answer Key
    Included
    Teaching Duration
    N/A
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    Standards

    to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
    Draw a scaled picture graph and a scaled bar graph to represent a data set with several categories. Solve one- and two-step “how many more” and “how many less” problems using information presented in scaled bar graphs. For example, draw a bar graph in which each square in the bar graph might represent 5 pets.
    A square with side length 1 unit, called “a unit square,” is said to have “one square unit” of area, and can be used to measure area.
    Measure areas by counting unit squares (square cm, square m, square in, square ft, and improvised units).
    Solve real world and mathematical problems involving perimeters of polygons, including finding the perimeter given the side lengths, finding an unknown side length, and exhibiting rectangles with the same perimeter and different areas or with the same area and different perimeters.
    Use tiling to show in a concrete case that the area of a rectangle with whole-number side lengths 𝘢 and 𝘣 + 𝘤 is the sum of 𝘢 × 𝘣 and 𝘢 × 𝘤. Use area models to represent the distributive property in mathematical reasoning.

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