Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner...

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Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Transcript of Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner...

Page 1: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Warm Up

• See the person on the side board for pencils.

• Get your journal out.

• Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Page 2: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Finding the Missing Angle of a Quadrilateral

Steps for Solving:1. Add the known angles.

2. Subtract that sum from 360.

3. If there is a picture, check to see if the angle is reasonable. (obtuse, right, acute)

Page 3: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Writing Equations Using Sequencing Tables

Look for a relationship betweenthe x and y data.

Test the rule on the rest of the pairs of numbers:

Test each answer choice!

Page 4: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Probability as a FractionStart with the first answer choice. Do this for each one until you get a fraction that works!

1. Organize your info:Write in a column how much of each color.

2. Add to find out how many color tiles total. That will be the denominator.

3. The question only asks about blue tiles. (preferred possibility) Write the number of blue tiles as the numerator.

4. Simplify.

5. The question asks which answer choice results in 1/3. If the fraction you end up with is not 1/3, try the next answer choice.

Page 5: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Radius and Diameter

Page 6: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Writing Equations Using Sequencing Tables

Look for a relationship betweenthe x and y data.

Test the rule on the rest of the pairs of numbers:

Page 7: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Line Plots

It consists of a number line that includes the values of the data set.

An X is placed above the corresponding value each time that value appears in the data set.

A line plot represents a set of data by showing how often a piece of data appears in that set.

Page 8: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Circumference of CirclesThe formula for finding the circumference of a circle is:

C=2∏r

Example:

Page 9: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Writing Equations for Word Problems

Steps for Solving:1. Organize the information.

2. Solve the problem, even though the question doesn’t ask you for a solution.

3. Select the answer choice that describes your solution.

Page 10: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Using a Protractor to Measure AnglesNotice that one of the rays of angle RNP is not lined up with the zero.• Follow each ray and record where each intersects the protractor. • Subtract to find the difference of those two numbers.• Is your answer reasonable? An acute angle should measure less

than 90 degrees. An obtuse angle should measure greater than 90 degrees.

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Types of Triangles

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Types of AnglesAcute (less than 90⁰)

Obtuse (greater than 90⁰)

Right (equal to 90⁰)

Straight (180⁰)

Page 13: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Types of AnglesAcute (less than 90⁰)

Obtuse (greater than 90⁰)

Right (equal to 90⁰)

Straight (180⁰)

Page 14: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Numbers in a Sequence• Starting with the first number.

What would you have to do to that number to result in the second number? Write that down.

• Starting with the second number, what would you have to do to that number that would result in the third?

• Continue this process through all of the numbers.

• Use that pattern to predict the next two numbers if that pattern continued.

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Elapsed Time• On a number line, mark the

time he left.

• Jump ahead by 1 hour jumps, stop before you pass the time he returned.

• Then, jump ahead using minutes until you reach the time he returned home.

• Count up the hours, and count up the minutes.

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Finding the MeanMean = average• Add the numbers.

• Divide by how many numbers you have.

What is the mean number of the jacks brought by her friends?

Page 17: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Writing Equations for Word Problems

Steps for Solving:1. Organize the

information.

2. Solve the problem, even though the question doesn’t ask you for a solution.

3. Write an equation that describes your solution.

Page 18: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Types of AnglesAcute (less than 90⁰)

Obtuse (greater than 90⁰)

Right (equal to 90⁰)

Straight (180⁰)

Page 19: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Circle GraphLook at the percentages for each soup in the question.

Write the soup names in order from least to greatest percentage.

Find the circle graph that represents that data.

Page 20: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Finding the Missing Angle of a Triangle

Steps for Solving:1. Add the known angles.

2. Subtract that sum from 180.

3. If there is a picture, check to see if the angle is reasonable. (obtuse, right, acute)

Page 21: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Stem and Leaf Plots:The stem is the 10s place.

The leaves are the 1s place.

The top row of the problem below represents:22, 24, 28, 28, 28, 29, 29

Mean, Median, Mode, and Range

Mean is the average. (add the numbers. Divide by how many numbers there are.)

Median: With numbers arranged in order from least to greatest, the median is the middle.

Mode: The number that occurs most often.

Find the least value, greatest value, mean, median, mode, and range of the data set.

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Radius and Diameter

Page 23: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Writing Equations for Word Problems

Steps for Solving:1. Organize the

information.

2. Solve the problem, even though the question doesn’t ask you for a solution.

3. Write an equation that describes your solution.

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Finding the Area of a Triangle

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Finding the Missing Angle of a Parallelogram

How to Solve:Opposite angles of parallelograms are equal.

If you have the measure of the angle opposite of the one being asked, you have the answer!

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Feet and Inches

How to Solve:For each section of rope, add the feet together (leave the inches for now).

Now, add just the inches together.

Divide the inches by 12. Add that number to the feet that you had in the first step.

Look at the remainder to see if you should round up or down to the nearest foot.

Page 27: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.

Median

Write the numbers in order from least to greatest.

Find the number in the middle. That is the median.

If the middle falls between two numbers, find the midpoint of those numbers.

Page 28: Warm Up See the person on the side board for pencils. Get your journal out. Get with your partner from yesterday. Continue working on your review.