Take a photo of an equation, and this site will explain how to solve it, step-by-step. It even explains different options to get to the answer. Students can use it for help with homework, and teachers can incorporate it in their own lesson plans. (Grades 6+; free, with premium optio...
= 2023. But I’m also feeling lucky because there are many interesting problems that involve the number 2023. I’m a little late in getting this post out, but all of the following problems attempt to use the number 2023 in some interesting way. Thanks to Professor Harold Reiter from UNC...
In the Room Options Menu, you can import a file. So download the file you want from here and import it there and the game is ready to go. You can then share the room code with students, and you can even make multiple rooms for different groups of students and jump between them. For...
Whenever they get stuck, it’s not uncommon for them to stare blankly at the official sheet and pray that the answer will magically “jump out”. This is because most confirmatory questions revolve around good old-fashioned extensions, factorizations, simplifications, and abolitions of similar term...
come 2023, we’ll finally catch up past the traditional multiple-choice and “griddable” response questions we’ve had as long as I’ve been a Texas teacher. While state testing isn’t everything, assessment FOR learning and using tech tools to help us assess FOR learning are kind of a...
August 13, 2023reflection It’s the day before my first week of school (teachers start tomorrow and learners start Wednesday) and I just realized I never actually went back to look at my Teacher Report Card results! Better late than never, right!
Remember that this is the only sheet that is marked, so make sure you have all your answers transferred here by the end of the contest. 3. The problems are arranged in three groups. A correct answer of the first 10 problems is worth 3 points. A correct answer of problems 11-20 is ...