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A collection of objects that are a circle or have a circular face. Examples include plates, cans, cookie tins, and hockey pucks.
any fair two-sided coin
Approximately cylindrical food items that can be easily sliced. Examples include carrots or cheese sticks.
Examples of graphing technology are a handheld graphing calculator, a computer with a graphing calculator application installed, and an internet-enabled device with access to a site like desmos.com/calculator or geogebra.org/graphing. For students using the digital materials, a separate graphing calculator tool isn't necessary—interactive applets are embedded throughout, and a graphing calculator tool is accessible on the student digital toolkit page.
cubes with sides numbered from 1 to 6
Figures cut from cardboard or card stock with at least one straight side that can be taped to a pencil. Shapes might include various polygons, half-discs, and composites of these.
A rigid edge that can be used for drawing line segments. Sometimes a ruler is okay to use as a straightedge, but sometimes it is preferable to use an unruled straightedge, like a blank index card.
Any way for students to create work that can be easily displayed to the class. Examples: Chart paper and markers, whiteboard space and markers, shared online drawing tool, access to a document camera.
Bundles of "patty paper" are available commercially for a very low cost. These are small sheets (about 5" by 5") of transparent paper.