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The purpose of this Warm-Up is to encourage students to relate expressions of the form to by exploring the structure of the factors (MP7). Evaluating and expanding expressions will be useful when students explore products of bases with the same exponent in a following activity.
Give students 2 minutes of quiet work time followed by a whole-class discussion.
The purpose of this discussion is to help students make connections between the two expressions. Here are some questions for discussion:
In this activity, students use repeated reasoning to discover the rule (MP8). When students articulate their reasoning for what happens when neither the bases nor the exponents are the same, they have an opportunity to attend to precision in the language they use to describe their thinking (MP6). They might first propose less formal or imprecise language, and after sharing with a partner, revise their explanation to be clearer and stronger.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give students 6–7 minutes to complete the table and answer the questions.
The table contains products of expressions with different bases and the same exponent. Complete the table to see how we can rewrite them. Use the “expanded” column to work out how to combine the factors into a new base.
| expression | expanded | exponent |
|---|---|---|
The goal of this discussion is to clarify what happens when multiplying two factors with different bases that cannot be rewritten to have the same base.
Use Stronger and Clearer Each Time to give students an opportunity to revise and refine their response to “What happens if neither the exponents nor the bases are the same?” In this structured pairing strategy, students bring their first draft response into conversations with 2–3 different partners. They take turns being the speaker and the listener. As the speaker, students share their initial ideas and read their first draft. As the listener, students ask questions and give feedback that will help their partner clarify and strengthen their ideas and writing.
If time allows, display these prompts for feedback:
Close the partner conversations, and give students 3–5 minutes to revise their first draft. Encourage students to incorporate any good ideas and words they got from their partners to make their next draft stronger and clearer.
Here is an example of a second draft: "When multiplying expressions where the bases are the same, the exponents can be added together. If the bases are different but the exponents are the same, the bases can be regrouped and multiplied. If the bases and the exponents are different, and the expressions cannot be rewritten to have the same base, then the bases can not be grouped together evenly, and the expression cannot be expressed with a single exponent."
Introduce and explain the visual display prepared earlier. This display should be kept visible to students throughout the remainder of the unit.
Optional
This activity gives students an opportunity to deepen their thinking by generating different equivalent expressions using the rules of exponents. The process of generating different expressions requires students to look for and make use of structure when considering the numerous ways numbers can be broken into factors and how to combine those factors and express the result using exponents (MP7).
Arrange students in groups of 2–3. Provide students with tools for creating a visual display.
There will be several rounds in which students generate multiple expressions equivalent to a given number. As an example, invite the class to generate expressions equivalent to 1,000 using any combination of the exponent rules that we have learned so far. Display exponent rules and examples (such as those shown in the table) for all to see.
Explain that after each round, groups will be paired up to score each other’s display. If there are an odd number of groups, have a group of 3 score each other.
Keep the examples on display for all to see while students are working to generate their own expressions. Set a timer for 2 minutes (or other duration, depending on time available) and let students work with their groups.
Play as many rounds of this game as time allows. In subsequent rounds, pair groups up with different opponents. Consider using the following numbers in different rounds as time permits: 3,600, , 810,000, , and 3,375.
Your teacher will give your group tools for creating a visual display to play a game. The goal is to write as many expressions as you can that equal a specific number, using any of the exponent rules that we have learned:
When the time is up, compare your expressions with another group to see how many points you earned.
The purpose of this discussion is for students to share what they learned about the rules of exponents by working in groups and playing the game. Here are some questions for discussion:
The goal of the discussion is to check that students understand why the exponent rule works. Here are questions for discussion:
In this lesson, we developed a rule for combining expressions with the same exponent but different bases: The factors can be regrouped and raised to the same exponent.
To see this, expand into three factors that are 2 and three factors that are 5. Regroup the factors into three groups of , or three groups of 10.
If some students write instead of , or instead of , consider asking: