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Ask students to think of anything they know about equivalent expressions. Ask if they can:
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give 3 minutes of quiet work time and then invite students to share their responses with their partner, followed by a whole-class discussion.
Select all the expressions that are equivalent to . Explain how you know each expression you select is equivalent.
The purpose of this discussion is to revisit ways of telling whether two expressions are equivalent, and to recall the distributive property.
Select a student who tested values to explain how they know two expressions are not equivalent. For example, is not equivalent to , because if we use 0 in place of , is 9 but is 14. If no one brings this up, demonstrate an example.
Select a student who used the term “distributive property” to explain why is equivalent to and ask them to explain what they mean by that term. In general, an expression of the form is equivalent to .
Draw a tape diagram to match each equation.