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Unit 1 – Number Relationships Divisibility Rules A number is divisible by 2, if it is an even number (ends in 0,2,4,6,8). A number is divisible by 3, if the sum of the digits is divisible by 3. A number is divisible by 4, if the last two digits are divisible by 4. A number is divisible by 5, if it ends in a 0 or a 5. A number is divisible by 6, if it is divisible by 2 and 3. A number is divisible by 8, if the last three digits are divisible by 8. A number is divisible by 9, if the sum of the digits is divisible by 9. A number is divisible by 10, if the last digit is a 0. Unit 2 – Fractions Equivalent Fractions 1) Divide or Multiply the numerator and denominator by the same number – you get to choose what operations you do and by what number. 2) What you do to the top, you to do the bottom. Lowest Terms 1) Divide the numerator and denominator by the largest number that will divide evenly into both. 2) To find the largest number make a factor tree 3) Divide the numerator and denominator by the largest number. Changing an Improper Fraction to a Mixed Number Improper fraction – when the numerator is larger than the denominator. Mixed number – a whole number and a fraction. 1) The denominator stays the same. 2) Ask myself, “How many times does the denominator go into the numerator?” - the answer to the question is the whole number 3) The remainder is the numerator. Changing a Mixed Number into an Improper Fraction (SMA) 1. The denominator stays the same. 2. Multiply the denominator and the whole number. 3. Add the numerator to your answer to get your new numerator. Adding and Subtracting Fractions with the Same Denominators 1) Denominator stays the same. 2) Add or subtract the numerators (depending on the question) Adding and Subtracting Fractions with the Different Denominator 1) Create a common denominator. - the easiest way to do this is multiply the denominators together 2) What you do to the bottom, you do to the top. 3) Add or subtract the numerators and place your answer over the new denominator (common denominator). Adding and Subtracting Mixed Numbers Adding 1) focus on the fractions – if the denominators are the same follow the rules. - if the denominators are different follow the rules. 2) If your answer is an improper fraction turn it into a mixed number. 3) After adding the fractions, add the whole numbers Subtracting – 1) Turn into an improper fraction. 2) Follow the rules for adding and subtracting fractions. 3) Remember to turn your answer back into a mixed number. Unit 3 – Decimal Numbers When adding or subtracting with decimals – line up the decimals and then do the work. Be sure to move the decimal down into your answers. 7.1 27.9 + 6.4 - 15.3 13.5 12.6 When multiplying with decimals – line up the last digit in each number. Do the multiplication then total the number of decimal places in your question and put that many decimal places in your answer. 14.1 – 1 place x 5 – 0 places 70.5 - 1 place When dividing with a decimal in the dividend – move the decimal directly above to the answer and then do the work. 7.1 5) 35.5 - 35 05 When dividing with a decimal in the divisor – move the decimal as many times needed to the right to make it a whole number. Then move the decimal in the dividend as many times as you did in the divisor. ______ ___5.76 0.85 ) 4.90 85 ) 490.00 - 425 650 - 595 550 How to write terminating decimals as a fractions - remove the decimals from the number, the new number becomes your numerator - the denominator will be a power of ten (10, 100, 1000, etc.). To determine what the denominator will be, you need to look back at the original decimal number. However many places after the decimal there were, that is how many zeros will be in your power of ten numerator. Ex. 0.6 = 6/10 0.12 = 12/100 0.375 = 375/1000 How to write repeating decimals as fractions. - when a decimal is repeating, you follow the same rules as above, except of the denominator is a nine. - to determine the number of nines you put as your denominator, refer back to the original number. The number of places after the decimal will be the number of nines in the denominator. Ex. 0.1 . . . = 1/9 0.123 . . . = 123/999 1. Do operations in brackets first. 2. Evaluate exponents. 3. Do division and multiplication in the order they appear – from left to right. 4. Do addition and subtraction in the order they appear – from left to right. B – Brackets ( ) E – Exponents 3³ D – Division ÷ M- Multiplication x A – Addition + S- Subtraction – - When you see ‘half of #’ in the equation it means you can divide by 2 or multiply by 0.5 - ( ) ( ) = Multiplication Unit 4 - Percent Percent to Fraction Fraction to Percent 30% = 30 = 3 100 10 (in lowest terms) 7 = 14 = 14% 50 100 Percent to Decimal Decimal to Percent 78% = 78 = 0.78 100 whole = % part 100 0.03 = 0.03 = 3 = 3% 1 100 * Cross multiply and divide Unit 5 – Measurement Square / rectangle P = s1 + s2 + s3 + s4 a=LxW Parallelogram P = s1 + s2 + s3 + s4 A=bxh Triangle P = s1 + s2 + s3 A=bxh÷2 Circle P (circumference) = π x d A=πxrxr Unit 6 – Integers (1) When adding integers with the same signs: Add and keep the sign the same Example: (-5) + (-4) = (-9) (+5) + (+4) = (+9) (2) When adding integers with opposite signs: 1st:subtract the smaller number from the larger number to get the difference 2nd: add the sign (- or +) from the larger number to the difference 3rd: Vola! You have the answer!! Example: (-5) + (+6) = +1 (3) When subtracting integers add it’s opposite: 1st: Keep the first integer the same 2nd: Change the subtraction sign to an addition sign 3rd: Change the second integer to it’s opposite 4th: Use the rules for addition of integers to complete to find the answer Example 1: (-5) - (+4) = ? (-5) + (-4) = -9 Unit 7 – Geometry Translation/Slide – The original figure and its image are congruent (same size and shape). – The image faces the same way as the original figure – the slide happens along straight lines – left or right, up or down 1. If x is positive (+) then it will move right 2. If x is negative (-) then it will move left 3. If y is positive (+) then it will move up 4. If y is positive (-) then it will move down Reflection/Flip – The original figure and its image are congruent (same size and shape). – The line the shape is flipped in is called the line of reflection or the mirror image line – The image is the same distance from the line of refection as the figure but is on the opposite side of the line. Rotation/Turn – The original figure and its image are congruent (same size and shape). – Each point on a shape is moved about a fixed point – Rotations can be clockwise or counter clockwise – ¼ = 90° ½ = 180° ¾ =270° full = 360° Unit 8 – Statistics The range is the difference between the highest and lowest values in a set of data. Example: Data set: 4, 8, 2, 9, 3, 3, 1 Data set arranged from least to greatest: 1, 2, 3, 3, 4, 8, 9 Range: 9 – 1 = 8 The mode is the number that occurs most frequently in a set of data. Example: Data set: 4, 8, 2, 9, 3, 3, 1 Mode: 3 The median is the middle value when the data are arranged in numerical order. If the number of pieces of data is even, the median is the average of the 2 middle values. Example: Data set: 4, 8, 2, 9, 3, 3, 1 Data set arranged from least to greatest: 1, 2, 3, 3, 4, 8, 9 Median: 3 The mean is calculated by finding the sum of the data and dividing by the number of pieces of data Example: Data set: 4, 8, 2, 9, 3, 3, 1 Mean: 4 + 8 + 2 + 9 + 3 + 3 + 1 = 30 An outlier is a data value that is far from the other data. Example: Data set: 14, 18, 16, 19, 21, 14, 2, 18, 14, 15, 23, 17, 15 Data set arranged from least to greatest (or plot the data on a line plot : 2, 14, 14, 14, 15, 15, 16, 17, 18, 18, 19, 21, 23 Outlier: 2 Unit 9 – Linear Relations and Linear Equations Algebraic Expression (also known as a Pattern Rule) Example: 3n + 4 Algebraic Equations Example: y = 3n + 4 Variable: a quantity that changes y = 3n + 4 y and n are variables Constant Term: a quantity that does not change; stays the same y = 3n + 4 4 is a constant term Numerical Coefficient: the number that is multiplied by the variable y = 3n + 4 (3n means 3 × n) 3 is a numerical coefficient Writing an Equations from a diagram: Explanation: When you go from Figure 1 to Figure 2 you add 3 blocks and when you go from Figure 2 to Figure 3 you add 3 blocks; therefore the variable coefficient is 3. Unit 10 – Probability Unit 11 – Circle Graphs