Math Mammoth Integers is a worktext that covers all the important integer topics for middle school (grades 6-8). The instructions are written directly to the student, so using the book requires very little teacher involvement.
Integers are introduced using the number line to relate them to the concepts of temperature, elevation, and money. We also study the ideas of absolute value (an integer’s distance from zero) and the opposite of a number.
Next, students learn to locate points in all four quadrants of the coordinate plane, and how the coordinates of a figure change when it is reflected across the x or y-axis. Students also move points according to given instructions and find distances between points with the same first coordinate or the same second coordinate.
Adding and subtracting integers is presented through two main models: (1) movements along the number line and (2) positive and negative counters. With the help of these models, students should not only learn the shortcuts, or “rules,” for adding and subtracting integers, but also understand why these shortcuts work.
In the lesson Graphing, students plot points on the coordinate grid according to a given equation in two variables (such as y = x + 2), this time also using negative numbers. They see the patterns in the coordinates of the points and the pattern in the points drawn in the grid, and also work through some real-life problems.
Next, we study the distance between two integers. This can be found by taking the absolute value of their difference: the distance between x and y is | x − y |. Students learn to use this formula to find distances between integers, and they also compare the result the formula gives to the answer they get by logical thinking.
Multiplication and division of integers is explained, first of all using counters, and then relying on the properties of multiplication and division. The lesson Multiplying Integers not only teaches the mechanics of how to multiply integers but also gives both intuitive understanding and formal justification for the shortcut, “a negative times a negative makes a positive.” This formal justification using the distributive property introduces and illustrates the type of careful and precise reasoning that mathematicians use in proofs.
Then, the lesson on the division of integers leads naturally into the topic of negative fractions. The final topic is a review of the order of operations: we perform several operations at a time with integers.
Details
- Publication Date
- Oct 28, 2010
- Language
- English
- Category
- Education & Language
- Copyright
- All Rights Reserved - Standard Copyright License
- Contributors
- By (author): Maria Miller
Specifications
- Pages
- 87
- Binding
- Perfect Bound
- Interior Color
- Color
- Dimensions
- US Letter (8.5 x 11 in / 216 x 279 mm)