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TOOLS
Martinez 12
ASSESSMENT
TOOLS
Martinez 13
2. Post-Assessment
(The
full
document
can
be
found
back
on
the
Lesson
Plans
page
of
the
e-portfolio)
ASSESSMENT
TOOLS
Martinez 14
3. Standards
Addressed
a. These
two
assessments
address
Seventh
Grade
Standard
2:
Patterns,
Functions,
and
Algebraic
Structures
(Colorado
Department
of
Education,
2010)
1. Properties
of
arithmetic
can
be
used
to
generate
equivalent
expressions.
a. Use
properties
of
operations
to
generate
equivalent
expressions
(CCSS:
7.EE)
i. Apply
properties
of
operations
as
strategies
to
add,
subtract,
factor,
and
expand
linear
expressions
with
rational
coefficients.
(CCSS:
7.EE.1)
ii. Demonstrate
that
rewriting
an
expression
in
different
forms
in
a
problem
context
can
shed
light
on
the
problem
and
how
the
quantities
in
it
are
related.
(CCSS:
7.EE.2)
ASSESSMENT
TOOLS
Martinez 15
4. Goals
Addressed
a. After
these
assessments,
the
students
should
understand:
i. That
they
can
represent
anything
that
is
equivalent
in
mathematics
(number,
shape,
measurement,
expression,
or
equation)
in
an
infinite
number
of
ways.
This
can
be
shown
through
rewriting
an
expression
in
multiple
different
forms.
ii. That
they
can
use
mathematical
models
to
express
a
situation
that
is
described
in
words
and
that
these
expressions/equations
can
be
used
to
find
or
even
defend
a
solution.
This
can
be
shown
through
putting
written
numbers
into
their
number
form,
translating
operation
queues
into
operation
symbols,
and
turning
written
words/objects
into
variables.
5. Objectives
Addressed
a. After
these
assessments,
the
students
will
be
able
to:
i. Define
key
vocabulary:
Coefficient
Constant
Term
Like
term
Variable
Algebraic
expression
Numerical
expression
Equivalent
expression
ii. Use
substitution
to
evaluate
an
algebraic
expression.
iii. Identify
and
apply
the
following
properties
of
real
numbers:
Distributive
Associative
Commutative
iv. Reflect
on
an
answer
to
make
sure
it
is
reasonable
for
the
situation.
v. Translating
words
into
expressions
(and
vise
versa)
by:
Using
key
vocabulary
Starting
with
a
formula
Identifying
unneeded
information
Generalizing
patterns
ASSESSMENT
TOOLS
Martinez 16
Equations
At
this
point
the
students
have
had
exposure
to
working
with
variable
and
evaluating.
This
part
of
the
unit
combines
that
with
the
concept
of
equality.
Students
are
starting
to
see
how
they
can
use
the
properties
of
real
numbers
in
multiple
contexts.
A
big
part
of
this
section
is
the
concept
of
inverse
operations.
The
pre-assessment
in
the
section
of
the
unit
has
a
similar
goal
to
the
pre-assessment
for
expressions.
The
students
were
given
an
assignment
that
was
parallel
to
the
post-assessment
they
would
be
given
after
about
three
weeks
of
instruction
on
equations.
The
assignment
was
handed
out
after
the
first
lesson,
which
was
filled
with
vocabulary
and
overarching
concepts.
Just
like
during
the
expressions
portion,
I
graded
each
students
pre-assessment
and
gave
them
feedback.
This
time
students
had
a
pretty
good
idea
that
they
would
be
seeing
a
similar
assignment
for
their
post
assessment,
but
I
once
again
told
them
that
was
the
case
and
recommended
that
they
go
back
and
try
it
again
to
see
how
they
did
to
figure
out
what
they
needed
to
study.
Again,
each
topic
covered
during
this
portion
of
the
unit
(solving
one-step
equations,
solving
two-step
equations,
solving
multi-step
equations,
writing
and
solving
equations/word
problems)
was
assessed
based
on
a
4
point
scale,
each
of
the
problems
are
worth
1
point
(unless
they
ask
for
an
explanation,
then
they
are
worth
2)
and
then
everything
is
scaled
down
to
make
it
4
points.
This
point
scale
comes
from
the
standards
based
grading
where
4
is
exceeding
standard,
3
is
meets
standard,
2
is
below
standard,
and
1
is
insufficient
evidence.
In
order
to
qualify
for
any
of
these
points
the
students
were
also
required
to
show
the
work
for
their
answers.
My
goal
was
to
have
at
least
60%
of
the
students
to
move
up
one
full
point
on
the
grading
scale
from
their
pre-assessment
to
their
post-assessment.
ASSESSMENT
TOOLS
Martinez 17
1. Pre-Assessment
(The
full
document
can
be
found
back
on
the
Lesson
Plans
page
of
the
e-portfolio)
ASSESSMENT
TOOLS
Martinez 18
2. Post-Assessment
(The
full
document
can
be
found
back
on
the
Lesson
Plans
page
of
the
e-portfolio)
ASSESSMENT
TOOLS
Martinez 19
3. Standards
Addressed
a. These
two
assessments
address
Seventh
Grade
Standard
2:
Patterns,
Functions,
and
Algebraic
Structures
(Colorado
Department
of
Education,
2010)
2. Equations
and
expressions
model
quantitative
relationships
and
phenomena.
a. Solve
multi-step
real-life
and
mathematical
problems
posed
with
positive
and
negative
rational
numbers
in
any
form,
using
tools
strategically.
(CCSS:
7.EE.3)
b. Apply
properties
of
operations
to
calculate
with
numbers
in
any
form,
convert
between
forms
as
appropriate,
and
assess
the
reasonableness
of
answers
using
mental
computation
and
estimation
strategies.
(CCSS:
7.EE.3)
c. Use
variables
to
represent
quantities
in
a
real-world
or
mathematical
problem,
and
construct
simple
equations
and
inequalities
to
solve
problems
by
reasoning
about
the
quantities.
(CCSS:
7.EE.4)
i. Fluently
solve
word
problems
leading
to
equations
of
the
form
px
+
q
=
r
and
p(x
+
q)
=
r,
where
p,
q,
and
r
are
specific
rational
numbers.
(CCSS:
7.EE.4a)
ii. Compare
an
algebraic
solution
to
an
arithmetic
solution,
identifying
the
sequence
of
the
operations
used
in
each
approach.
(CCSS:
7.EE.4b)
b. These
two
assessments
also
address
Eighth
Grade
Standard
2:
Patterns,
Functions,
and
Algebraic
Structures
(Colorado
Department
of
Education,
2010)
2. Properties
of
algebra
and
equality
are
used
to
solve
linear
equations
and
systems
of
equations
a. Solve
linear
equations
in
one
variable.
(CCSS:
8.EE.7)
i. Give
examples
of
linear
equations
in
one
variable
with
one
solution,
infinitely
many
solutions,
or
no
solutions.
(CCSS:
8.EE.7a)
ASSESSMENT
TOOLS
Martinez 20
4. Goals
Addressed
a. After
these
assessments,
the
students
should
understand:
i. That
they
can
represent
anything
that
is
equivalent
in
mathematics
(number,
shape,
measurement,
expression,
or
equation)
in
an
infinite
number
of
ways.
An
equals
sign
is
what
separates
two
equivalent
numbers,
shapes,
measurements,
expression,
or
equations.
Equivalencies
are
found
through
inverse
operations
and
this
leads
to
finding
the
solution(s).
ii. That
they
can
use
mathematical
models
to
express
a
situation
that
is
described
in
words
and
that
these
expressions/equations
can
be
used
to
find
or
even
defend
a
solution.
This
can
be
shown
through
putting
written
numbers
into
their
number
form,
translating
operation
queues
into
operation
symbols,
and
turning
written
words/objects
into
variables.
Solution(s)
to
a
linear
equation
can
be
found
in
a
variety
of
ways.
a. Ordered
pairs
b. A
graph
c. The
equation
itself
iii. That
the
properties
they
have
learned
thus
far
about
arithmetic
and
algebra
along
with
the
concept
of
equivalence
can
be
used
to
solve
problems.
5. Objectives
Addressed
a. After
these
assessments,
the
students
will
be
able
to:
i. Define
key
vocabulary:
Equation
Infinite
ii. Identify
and
apply
the
following
properties
of
real
numbers:
Additive
Inverse
Multiplicative
Inverse
Identity
iii. Identify
and
apply
the
following
properties
of
equality:
Addition
Subtraction
Multiplication
Division
iv. Correctly
follow
procedures
for
solving
linear
equations
in
a
variety
of
different
ways.
ASSESSMENT
TOOLS
Martinez 21
ASSESSMENT
TOOLS
Martinez 22
Group
Work
I
make
sure
to
at
least
once
a
week
get
students
working
in
groups
on
3-4
or
with
a
partner.
I
believe
it
is
important
for
students
to
learn
from
and
have
to
opportunity
to
teach
each
other
concepts.
We
have
set
up
norms
in
the
classroom
that
allow
students
to
pick
their
partners/groups
most
of
the
time.
There
are
times
when
I
establish
these
prior
to
class
based
on
how
students
are
performing
(I
believe
that
it
is
valuable
to
sometimes
group
my
students
who
really
understand
with
students
who
may
not
be
getting
it
as
well).
Group
work
sometimes
looks
like
working
on
assignments
together;
there
are
other
times
where
the
students
are
playing
math
games
that
correlate
with
what
we
are
coving
at
that
time.
I
really
try
to
encourage
my
students
to
challenge
each
other
with
their
work
and
to
ask
questions
to
make
sure
that
they
both
understand
the
content.
Questioning
I
use
different
forms
of
questioning
everyday
to
gauge
where
my
students
are.
After
some
of
the
more
challenging
questions
that
we
worked
on
and
then
checked,
I
will
ask
how
many
students
got
the
answer
correct.
Also,
I
try
to
ask
questions
like
why
to
get
students
thinking
about
why
they
are
doing
something
and
not
just
going
through
the
motions.
The
other
way
I
used
questioning
is
by
focusing
on
the
questions
students
are
asking
each
other
and
me.
If
they
are
asking
thought
out
and
high
level
questions
I
know
that
they
are
internalizing
what
they
are
doing
and
really
working
to
understand
the
material.
Questioning
is
a
great
way
for
me
to
get
qualitative
data
about
where
my
students
are
with
a
particular
concept.
Unit
Assessment
At
the
end
of
the
unit
the
students
are
given
a
district
assessment,
which
assesses
all
of
the
key
points
from
a
unit.
Some
of
the
questions
on
this
assessment
are
surface
level
to
see
if
students
got
the
basic
concepts,
a
good
majority
of
them
check
for
deeper
understanding
and
challenge
students
to
use
what
they
have
learned
in
a
realistic
type
of
problem.
The
grades
and
data
from
the
district
assessment
go
straight
to
the
district
for
the
district
to
use
for
research
and
analysis
purposes.
In
order
to
help
them
get
accurate
findings,
we
try
to
stress
the
importance
of
these
assessments
to
the
students
and
we
encourage
them
to
not
leave
anything
blank
and
to
show
their
thinking
anywhere
possible.
Since
we
grade
the
assessments
before
sending
everything
to
the
district,
we
also
are
able
to
get
a
good
feel
for
where
the
students
ended
up
at
the
end
of
the
unit.
We
use
this
data
to
figure
out
what
we
need
to
continue
to
spiral
in
for
the
students
to
make
sure
they
are
getting
more
exposure
to
it.