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Identifying Rational and Irrational Numbers Halloween Digital Activity

Rated 5 out of 5, based on 6 reviews
5.0 (6 ratings)
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Rise over Run
23.9k Followers
Grade Levels
8th - 9th
Standards
Formats Included
  • Zip
  • Google Appsâ„¢
  • Microsoft OneDrive
Pages
PowerPoint and Google Slides Access Link
$3.00
$3.00
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Rise over Run
23.9k Followers
Includes Google Appsâ„¢
The Teacher-Author indicated this resource includes assets from Google Workspace (e.g. docs, slides, etc.).

What educators are saying

I used this for my "do now" activity on Halloween. They were fully engaged...even on Halloween! What a great spin on the traditional multiple choice problem this was.

Description

Engage your students with this fun no prep practice for distinguishing rational and irrational numbers! They'll love this escape room activity as they find their way through the haunted house.

The download includes Google Slides and PowerPoint versions.

Here's how it works:

Students enter 14 rooms and choose the rational number. If they choose correctly, they will enter the correct door and avoid the scary giant spiders! If they make a mistake, a spider appears, and they are prompted to try again.

Problems begin simple and increase in difficulty, including roots, pi, fractions, repeating decimals, terminating decimals, and expressions that must be simplified.

This is self-checking practice. Students will not turn in any work, and you will not need to grade anything. They will know as they work if they are answering correctly.

Total Pages
PowerPoint and Google Slides Access Link
Answer Key
N/A
Teaching Duration
1 hour
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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Know that numbers that are not rational are called irrational. Understand informally that every number has a decimal expansion; for rational numbers show that the decimal expansion repeats eventually, and convert a decimal expansion which repeats eventually into a rational number.

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