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Equivalent Expressions Digital Escape Room Bundle 6th-7th Grade Math Activities

Rated 5 out of 5, based on 2 reviews
5.0 (2 ratings)
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The Great Classroom Escape
2.3k Followers
Grade Levels
5th - 8th, Homeschool
Resource Type
Standards
Formats Included
  • Zip
  • Google Apps™
Pages
2 Google Forms™ Escape Rooms + PDF Extras
$7.50
List Price:
$10.00
You Save:
$2.50
Bundle
$7.50
List Price:
$10.00
You Save:
$2.50
Bundle
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The Great Classroom Escape
2.3k Followers
Includes Google Apps™
This bundle contains one or more resources with Google apps (e.g. docs, slides, etc.).
Easel Activities Included
Some resources in this bundle include ready-to-use interactive activities that students can complete on any device.  Easel by TPT is free to use! Learn more.

What educators are saying

My students love doing escape rooms as we review concepts that we have learned. Thank you for putting so much effort into your resources, these are by far their favorite escape rooms!
My students love The Great Escape's escape room activities! This activity was great review in preparation for our multi-step equations standards. Students were so excited to complete the challenges!

Products in this Bundle (2)

    Description

    Can your sixth and seventh graders create equivalent expressions by combining like terms, factoring expressions, and using the distributive property? Your students find themselves trapped in a bunker, and their knowledge of 6th grade math standard 6.EE.A.3 and 7th grade standard 7.EE.A.1 will help them to escape. All problems in the 6th grade version contain positive whole numbers. The 7th grade version includes both positive and negative integers. The two versions of this activity allow teachers to differentiate.

    Keeping middle schoolers engaged with math can be a challenge. These escape rooms will encourage collaboration and get students excited to practice and review standards-based math skills. Can your students simplify an expression to tune the tv to the correct channel? Identifying like terms will reveal a combination to a locked box. A locker combination is found by decoding a secret message, then simplifying two expressions with distribution. Identifying equivalent expressions will turn off an alarm, and reveal the way out!

    These online activity are easy to implement and are completely automated by a Google Form™. Google accounts are not required; these math escape room can be completed by anybody with a device, browser, and internet connection. There are no clues to hide, but there are two printable student recording pages that are strongly recommended. The puzzles are completely self-checking and the form will only allow students to progress if correct answers are entered. Students will have to read carefully to figure out ciphers and codes!

    Math skills required to solve the puzzles:

    • Simplify expressions by combining like terms, factoring, and using the distributive property
    • Version 1, 6.EE.A.3, includes only positive whole numbers
    • Version 2, 7.EE.A.1, includes both positive and negative integers. Students will need a firm grasp of operations with negative numbers to complete this activity
    • Combine like terms in expressions with variables
    • Factor expressions
    • Identify equivalent expressions
    • Use the distributive property to simplify expressions and identify equivalent expressions
    • Identify the coefficients in expressions

    What's included in the PDF?

    • Quickstart guide with link to escape room
    • Optional link for Google Drive™ users to create a copy of the form to save to their own drives in order to view student results.
    • Optional (but highly recommended) printable student recording pages
    • Digital puzzle helper options (to use in place of the printable pages for distance learning)
    • Detailed answer key & teacher tips
    • Success signs to snap photos with after completing the activity (optional)

    FAQ

    • Do students need to have Gmail™ accounts? NO! Anyone with internet access and a tablet, computer, or even phone can complete the breakout.
    • How long will this take? That is the hardest question as the answer varies depending on each classroom, student, or group. Most students will be able to complete this activity in under 45 minutes. You can allow 60 minutes to be safe. The form will only save data if students are signed into Google accounts, so if you are worried about your students not finishing on time, simply have them write their answers on scratch paper. They can then come back and quickly re-enter their answers and pick up where they left off. Some students with a firm grasp on the concepts covered in this escape room will be able to complete the puzzles very quickly (20-30 minutes), others will take longer.
    • Can this be used for remote learning? Yes! This product is designed to be able to be completed completely online and can be done in-person, for distance learning, or hybrid models. Students will need a device and internet connection.
    • Will students have to search the web to figure out the puzzles? NO! All of the information needed will be provided in the Google Form™. The math in this activity is all standards-based.

    Escape rooms are a great way to provide extra practice for students, review for tests, or provide enrichment.

    View all of our digital breakouts for 6th grade math standards

    Check out our challenging 7th grade math activities

    See all of our digital escape rooms and logic puzzles

    Total Pages
    2 Google Forms™ Escape Rooms + PDF Extras
    Answer Key
    Included
    Teaching Duration
    55 minutes
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    Standards

    to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
    Apply the properties of operations to generate equivalent expressions. For example, apply the distributive property to the expression 3 (2 + 𝘹) to produce the equivalent expression 6 + 3𝘹; apply the distributive property to the expression 24𝘹 + 18𝘺 to produce the equivalent expression 6 (4𝘹 + 3𝘺); apply properties of operations to 𝘺 + 𝘺 + 𝘺 to produce the equivalent expression 3𝘺.
    Apply properties of operations as strategies to add, subtract, factor, and expand linear expressions with rational coefficients.

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