P.MP: Mathematical Practices

P.MP.1: Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them.

Biconditional Statements
Conditional Statements
Estimating Population Size
Pattern Flip (Patterns)

P.MP.1.a: Explain the meaning of a problem and look for entry points to its solution. Analyze givens, constraints, relationships, and goals. Make conjectures about the form and meaning of the solution, plan a solution pathway, and continually monitor progress asking, “Does this make sense?” Consider analogous problems, make connections between multiple representations, identify the correspondence between different approaches, look for trends, and transform algebraic expressions to highlight meaningful mathematics. Check answers to problems using a different method.

Biconditional Statements
Estimating Population Size
Fraction, Decimal, Percent (Area and Grid Models)
Improper Fractions and Mixed Numbers
Linear Inequalities in Two Variables
Modeling One-Step Equations
Multiplying with Decimals
Pattern Flip (Patterns)
Polling: City
Solving Equations on the Number Line
Using Algebraic Equations
Using Algebraic Expressions

P.MP.2: Reason abstractly and quantitatively.

Conditional Statements
Estimating Population Size

P.MP.3: Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others.

Biconditional Statements

P.MP.3.a: Understand and use stated assumptions, definitions, and previously established results in constructing arguments. Make conjectures and build a logical progression of statements to explore the truth of their conjectures. Justify conclusions and communicate them to others. Respond to the arguments of others by listening, asking clarifying questions, and critiquing the reasoning of others.

Biconditional Statements
Conditional Statements

P.MP.4: Model with mathematics.

Estimating Sums and Differences

P.MP.4.a: Apply mathematics to solve problems arising in everyday life, society, and the workplace. Make assumptions and approximations, identifying important quantities to construct a mathematical model. Routinely interpret mathematical results in the context of the situation and reflect on whether the results make sense, possibly improving the model if it has not served its purpose.

Determining a Spring Constant
Estimating Population Size

P.MP.5: Use appropriate tools strategically.

Elapsed Time

P.MP.5.a: Consider the available tools and be sufficiently familiar with them to make sound decisions about when each tool might be helpful, recognizing both the insight to be gained as well as the limitations. Identify relevant external mathematical resources and use them to pose or solve problems. Use tools to explore and deepen their understanding of concepts.

Segment and Angle Bisectors

P.MP.6: Attend to precision.

Biconditional Statements
Fraction, Decimal, Percent (Area and Grid Models)
Using Algebraic Expressions

P.MP.6.a: Communicate precisely to others. Use explicit definitions in discussion with others and in their own reasoning. They state the meaning of the symbols they choose. Specify units of measure and label axes to clarify the correspondence with quantities in a problem. Calculate accurately and efficiently, express numerical answers with a degree of precision appropriate for the problem context.

Arithmetic Sequences
Finding Patterns
Fraction, Decimal, Percent (Area and Grid Models)
Function Machines 2 (Functions, Tables, and Graphs)
Geometric Sequences
Pattern Flip (Patterns)

P.MP.7: Look for and make use of structure.

Pattern Flip (Patterns)

P.MP.7.a: Look closely at mathematical relationships to identify the underlying structure by recognizing a simple structure within a more complicated structure. See complicated things, such as some algebraic expressions, as single objects or as being composed of several objects.

Arithmetic Sequences
Finding Patterns
Function Machines 2 (Functions, Tables, and Graphs)
Geometric Sequences
Pattern Flip (Patterns)

P.MP.8: Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning.

Arithmetic Sequences
Arithmetic and Geometric Sequences
Finding Patterns
Geometric Sequences
Pattern Finder
Pattern Flip (Patterns)

P.MP.8.a: Notice if reasoning is repeated, and look for both generalizations and shortcuts. Evaluate the reasonableness of intermediate results by maintaining oversight of the process while attending to the details.

Arithmetic Sequences
Arithmetic and Geometric Sequences
Geometric Sequences

N: Number and Quantity

N.VM: Vector and Matrix Quantities

(Framing Text): Represent and model with vector quantities.

N.VM.1: Recognize vector quantities as having both magnitude and direction. Represent vector quantities by directed line segments, and use appropriate symbols for vectors and their magnitudes (e.g., v, |v|, ||v||, v).

Adding Vectors
Vectors

N.VM.2: Find the components of a vector by subtracting the coordinates of an initial point from the coordinates of a terminal point.

Vectors

N.VM.3: Solve problems involving velocity and other quantities that can be represented by vectors.

2D Collisions
Golf Range

(Framing Text): Perform operations on vectors.

N.VM. 4: Add and subtract vectors.

N.VM. 4.a: Add vectors end to end, component-wise, and by the parallelogram rule. Understand that the magnitude of a sum of two vectors is typically not the sum of the magnitudes.

Adding Vectors
Vectors

N.VM. 4.b: Given two vectors in magnitude and direction form, determine the magnitude and direction of their sum.

Adding Vectors
Vectors

N.VM. 4.c: Understand vector subtraction v – w as v + (–w), where –w is the additive inverse of w, with the same magnitude as w and pointing in the opposite direction. Represent vector subtraction graphically by connecting the tips in the appropriate order, and perform vector subtraction component-wise.

Adding Vectors
Vectors

N.VM.5: Multiply a vector by a scalar.

N.VM.5.a: Represent scalar multiplication graphically by scaling vectors and possibly reversing their direction; perform scalar multiplication component-wise, e.g., as c(vx , vy) = (cvx, cvy).

Dilations
Vectors

N.VM.5.b: Compute the magnitude of a scalar multiple cv using ||cv|| = |c|v. Compute the direction of cv knowing that when |c|v ≠ 0, the direction of cv is either along v (for c > 0) or against vs (for c < 0).

Vectors

N.CN: Complex Number Systems

(Framing Text): Perform arithmetic operations with complex numbers.

N.CN.3: Find the conjugate of a complex number; use conjugates to find moduli and quotients of complex numbers.

Points in the Complex Plane

(Framing Text): Represent complex numbers and their operations on the complex plane.

N.CN.4: Represent complex numbers on the complex plane in rectangular and polar form (including real and imaginary numbers), and explain why the rectangular and polar forms of a given complex number represent the same number.

Points in the Complex Plane

(Framing Text): Use complex numbers in polynomial identities and equations.

N.CN.10: Multiply complex numbers in polar form and use DeMoivre’s Theorem to find roots of complex numbers.

Points in the Complex Plane

A: Algebra

A.REI: Reasoning with Equations and Inequalities

(Framing Text): Solve systems of equations.

A.REI.8.: Represent a system of linear equations as a single matrix equation in a vector variable.

Solving Linear Systems (Matrices and Special Solutions)

A.REI.9.: Find the inverse of a matrix, if it exists, and use it to solve systems of linear equations (using technology for matrices of dimension 3 x 3 or greater).

Solving Linear Systems (Matrices and Special Solutions)

F: Functions

F.IF: Interpreting Functions

(Framing Text): Analyze functions using different representations.

F.IF.7: Graph functions expressed symbolically, and show key features of the graph, by hand in simple cases and using technology for more complicated cases.

F.IF.7.d: Graph rational functions, identifying zeros, asymptotes, and point discontinuities when suitable factorizations are available, and showing end behavior.

General Form of a Rational Function
Rational Functions

F.IF.11: Represent series algebraically, graphically, and numerically.

Arithmetic Sequences
Geometric Sequences

F.BF: Building Functions

(Framing Text): Build new functions from existing functions.

F.BF.4: Find inverse functions.

F.BF.4.b: Verify by composition that one function is the inverse of another.

Logarithmic Functions

F.BF.4.c: Read values of an inverse function from a graph or a table, given that the function has an inverse.

Logarithmic Functions

F.BF.5: Understand the inverse relationship between exponents and logarithms and use this relationship to solve problems involving logarithms and exponents.

Logarithmic Functions

F.TF: Trigonometric Functions

(Framing Text): Prove and apply trigonometric identities.

F.TF.9: Prove the addition and subtraction formulas for sine, cosine, and tangent, and use them to solve problems.

Simplifying Trigonometric Expressions
Sum and Difference Identities for Sine and Cosine

G: Geometry

G.GPE: Expressing Geometric Properties With Equations

(Framing Text): Translate between the geometric description and the equation for a conic section.

G.GPE.2: Derive the equation of a parabola given a focus and a directrix.

Parabolas

G.GPE.3: Derive the equations of ellipses and hyperbolas given the foci, using the fact that the sum or difference of distances from the foci is constant.

Ellipses
Hyperbolas

S: Statistics

S.CP: Conditional Probability and the Rules of Probability

(Framing Text): Understand independence and conditional probability and use them to interpret data.

S.CP.2: Understand that two events A and B are independent if the probability of A and B occurring together is the product of their probabilities, and use this characterization to determine if they are independent.

Independent and Dependent Events

S.CP.3: Understand the conditional probability of A given B as P(A and B)/P(B), and interpret independence of A and B as saying that the conditional probability of B given A is the same as the probability of B.

Independent and Dependent Events

(Framing Text): Use the rules of probability to compute probabilities of compound events in a uniform probability model.

S.CP.8: Apply the general Multiplication Rule in a uniform probability model, P(A andB) = P(A)P(B|A) = P(B)P(A|B), and interpret the answer in terms of the model.

Independent and Dependent Events

S.CP.9: Use permutations and combinations to compute probabilities of compound events and solve problems.

Binomial Probabilities
Permutations and Combinations

Correlation last revised: 9/16/2020

This correlation lists the recommended Gizmos for this state's curriculum standards. Click any Gizmo title below for more information.