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Quadratic Equations | Discriminant | Coloring Activity

$3.00

Students will practice using the discriminant to determine the number of real solutions for a quadratic equations. There are 20 quadratic equations which become progressively more challenging:

Problems 1-6: the right side of the equation is equal to zero

Problems 7-11: the right side of the equation is equal to a number

Problems 12-20: equations may or may not require combining like terms

This resource works well as independent practice, homework, extra credit or even as an assignment to leave for the substitute (includes answer key!)

Top 3 Reasons to Use Coloring Activities in the Classroom:

1- Coloring activities minimize off-task student behavior (making it more likely for students to complete the assignment in the allotted time frame) because they want to see what the end result will look like.

2- Coloring activities make self-checking simple for students: “I got blue for #5…how’d you get red?”

3- Coloring activities provide the teacher with a way to quickly assess student understanding while floating around the room: “Marie’s coloring sheet looks off…I better go over to her desk and check on how she’s doing.”

Worried about kids just coloring?…I was too. I require my students to have work shown for each problem as I would with any assignment: “Turning in a beautiful piece of art without the math to back it up doesn’t count as doing your assignment, kiddos!”

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ALGEBRA ACCENTS TOU:

© Copyright 2017 Marie De Los Reyes, “Algebra Accents.”

All rights reserved by author. This product is to be used by the original purchaser only. Non-transferrable. Copying for more than one teacher or classroom, or for an entire department, school, or school system is prohibited. Intended for single classroom and personal use only. This product may not be distributed or displayed digitally for public view, uploaded to school or district websites, distributed via email, or submitted to any file sharing sites unless password protected for student use only. Failure to comply is a copyright infringement and a violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA).