TPT
Total:
$0.00

Order of Operations Algebraic Expressions | Task Cards | Short Answer Version!

Rated 5 out of 5, based on 236 reviews
5.0 (236 ratings)
;
Rachel Lynette
123.7k Followers
Grade Levels
4th - 6th, Homeschool
Resource Type
Standards
Formats Included
  • PDF
Pages
11 (32 Task Cards)
$3.19
$3.19
Share this resource
Report this resource to TPT
Rachel Lynette
123.7k Followers
Easel Activity Included
This resource includes a ready-to-use interactive activity students can complete on any device.  Easel by TPT is free to use! Learn more.

Description

Order of Operations Task Cards: 32 Short Answer Cards

Use these 32 short answer task cards to practice interpreting order of operations. These cards are focused on the expression of the equation, rather than the solution. However, a Challenge Card is also included which can be used with any other card and which requires students to solve the equation. In addition, there is also a student answer sheet and an answer key so that students can self-check.

These cards will look best in color, but will also print out fine in grayscale. Simply print and cut along the guidelines. Laminate and use them again and again. Alternatively, you could print on cardstock. It works well to keep them in a baggie. Another option is to hole-punch a corner of each card and put them all on a ring.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

What's included?

  • Directions & Suggestions
  • 32 Task Cards - Color
  • 32 Task Cards - Blackline
  • Anchor Chart - Color
  • Anchor Chart - B&W
  • Anchor Chart - Coloring Page
  • Challenge Cards
  • Cover Card
  • Student Response Sheets
  • Answer Key

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Common Core Standards addressed in this set:

5.OA.1. Use parentheses, brackets, or braces in numerical expressions, and evaluate expressions with these symbols.

5.OA.2. Write simple expressions that record calculations with numbers, and interpret numerical expressions without evaluating them. For example, express the calculation "add 8 and 7, then multiply by 2" as 2 x(8 + 7). Recognize that 3 x (18932 + 921) is three times as large as 18932 + 921, without having to calculate the indicated sum or product.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Click here for a multiple choice version of these task cards.

Similar products:

• Place Value

• Fractions: Converting (double set)

• Close Reading Tool Kit for Literature

• Brain Breaks

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Copyright information:

Purchasing this product grants permission for use by one teacher in their own classroom. If you intend to share with others, please purchase an additional license.

Happy Teaching!

This product is brought to you happily by Rachel Lynette & Cassi Noack of Minds in Bloom. :)

SKU: 269106

Total Pages
11 (32 Task Cards)
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
N/A
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).
Use parentheses, brackets, or braces in numerical expressions, and evaluate expressions with these symbols.
Write simple expressions that record calculations with numbers, and interpret numerical expressions without evaluating them. For example, express the calculation “add 8 and 7, then multiply by 2” as 2 × (8 + 7). Recognize that 3 × (18932 + 921) is three times as large as 18932 + 921, without having to calculate the indicated sum or product.

Reviews

Questions & Answers

123.7k Followers