TPT
Total:
$0.00

1.OA.4 1st Grade Jeopardy - Subtraction As An Unknown-Addend Problem w/ Google

Rated 5 out of 5, based on 38 reviews
5.0 (38 ratings)
;
Tony Baulos
989 Followers
Grade Levels
1st, Adult Education, Homeschool
Standards
Formats Included
  • Zip
  • Google Apps™
Pages
79 pages
$4.50
$4.50
Share this resource
Report this resource to TPT
Tony Baulos
989 Followers
Includes Google Apps™
The Teacher-Author indicated this resource includes assets from Google Workspace (e.g. docs, slides, etc.).

What educators are saying

Students just love it any time you can incorporate games into learning. They especially liked this math review.

Description

1.OA.4 First Grade Common Core Math Jeopardy Game 1 OA.4 Subtraction As An Unknown-Addend Problem Practice provides two ways for students to practice and show mastery of their ability to understand subtraction as an unknown-addend problem.

Jeopardy board includes 25 distinct problems and utilizes hyperlinks to award/deduct money from your student teams! (79 slides in all!) Board is automatically updated to show which questions have already been utilized. Also includes an Answer Key if you wish to use questions as Quiz/Test. The PowerPoint file can be used on computers, or Promethean and Smart boards.

Now includes a Google Slides TM version in addition to the original PowerPoint!

Take a look at the preview file and buy today for your students benefit!

Standard 1.OA.4 Understand and apply properties of operations and the relationship between addition and subtraction.

4. Understand subtraction as an unknown-addend problem. For example, subtract 10 – 8 by finding the number that makes 10 when added to 8.

Total Pages
79 pages
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
1 hour
Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT’s content guidelines.

Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Write numbers from 0 to 20. Represent a number of objects with a written numeral 0-20 (with 0 representing a count of no objects).

Reviews

Questions & Answers

989 Followers