Sign in to view assessments and invite other educators
Sign in using your existing Kendall Hunt account. If you don’t have one, create an educator account.
For each pair of equations, decide whether the given value of is a solution to one or both equations.
The goal of this discussion is for students to share methods of determining if a pair of equations share a solution.
Display 2–3 approaches from previously selected students for all to see. Use Compare and Connect to help students compare, contrast, and connect the different approaches. Here are some questions for discussion:
Your teacher will display an equation. Take turns with your partner to generate an equivalent equation—an equation with the same solution. Generate as many different equations with the same solution as you can. Keep track of each one you find.
For each change that you make, explain to your partner how you know that your new equation is equivalent. Ask if your partner agrees with your thinking.
For each change that your partner makes, listen carefully to the explanation about why the new equation is equivalent. If you disagree, discuss your thinking and work to reach an agreement.
The goal is to review the work students did to create equivalent equations and the moves they could do to equations that wouldn’t change the solution.
Make a semi-permanent display of “moves that won’t change the solutions to equations.” Sort the list by moves that are done to each side, and moves that are done to one side. Use students’ language, adding formal language if that is an emphasis in your school.
Possible list:
Add the same value to each side.
Subtract the same value from each side.
Multiply each side by the same value (but not zero!).
Divide each side by the same value (but not zero!).
Change the order of terms (on one side) being added or multiplied (commutative property).
Change the grouping of terms (on one side) being added or multiplied (associative property).
Distributive property: .