Administrative Rules of Montana
Department 10 - EDUCATION
Chapter 10.53 - CONTENT STANDARDS
Subchapter 10.53.5 - Mathematics Content Standards
Rule 10.53.508 - MONTANA GRADE 6 MATHEMATICS CONTENT STANDARDS
Universal Citation: MT Admin Rules 10.53.508
Current through Register Vol. 18, September 20, 2024
(1) Mathematics ratios and proportional relationship content standards for Grade 6 are:
(a) understand the concept of a ratio and use
ratio language to describe a ratio relationship between two quantities; for
example, "The ratio of wings to beaks in the bird house at the zoo was 2:1,
because for every 2 wings there was 1 beak." "For every vote candidate A
received, candidate C received nearly three votes."
(b) understand the concept of a unit rate a/b
associated with a ratio a:b with b [NOTEQUAL] 0, and use rate language in the
context of a ratio relationship; for example, "This recipe has a ratio of 3
cups of flour to 4 cups of sugar, so there is 3/4 cup of flour for each cup of
sugar." "We paid $75 for 15 hamburgers, which is a rate of $5 per
hamburger."
(c) use ratio and rate
reasoning to solve real-world and mathematical problems from a variety of
cultural contexts, including those of Montana American Indians, e.g., by
reasoning about tables of equivalent ratios, tape diagrams, double number line
diagrams, or equations;
(i) make tables of
equivalent ratios relating quantities with whole-number measurements, find
missing values in the tables, plot the pairs of values on the coordinate plane,
and use tables to compare ratios;
(ii) solve unit rate problems including those
involving unit pricing and constant speed; for example, if it took 7 hours to
mow 4 lawns, then at that rate, how many lawns could be mowed in 35 hours? At
what rate were lawns being mowed? As a contemporary American Indian example, it
takes at least 16 hours to bead a Crow floral design on moccasins for two
children. How many pairs of moccasins can be completed in 72 hours?;
(iii) find a percent of a quantity as a rate
per 100 (e.g., 30% of a quantity means 30/100 times the quantity) and solve
problems involving finding the whole, given a part and the percent;
(iv) use ratio reasoning to convert
measurement units and manipulate and transform units appropriately when
multiplying or dividing quantities.
(2) Mathematics number system content standards for Grade 6 are:
(a) interpret and
compute quotients of fractions and solve word problems involving division of
fractions by fractions, e.g., by using visual fraction models and equations to
represent the problem; for example, create a story context for (2/3) ÷
(3/4) and use a visual fraction model to show the quotient; use the
relationship between multiplication and division to explain that (2/3) ÷
(3/4) = 8/9 because 3/4 of 8/9 is 2/3. (In general, (a/b) ÷ (c/d) =
ad/bc.) How much chocolate will each person get if 3 people share 1/2 lb of
chocolate equally? How many 3/4-cup servings are in 2/3 of a cup of yogurt? How
wide is a rectangular strip of land with length 3/4 mi and area 1/2 square
mi?;
(b) fluently divide multidigit
numbers using the standard algorithm;
(c) fluently add, subtract, multiply, and
divide multidigit decimals using the standard algorithm for each
operation;
(d) find the greatest
common factor of two whole numbers less than or equal to 100 and the least
common multiple of two whole numbers less than or equal to 12; use the
distributive property to express a sum of two whole numbers 1-100 with a common
factor as a multiple of a sum of two whole numbers with no common factor; for
example, express 36 + 8 as 4 (9 + 2);
(e) understand that positive and negative
numbers are used together to describe quantities having opposite directions or
values (e.g., temperature above/below zero, elevation above/below sea level,
credits/debits, positive/negative electric charge) and use positive and
negative numbers to represent quantities in real-world contexts, explaining the
meaning of 0 in each situation;
(f)
understand a rational number as a point on the number line and extend number
line diagrams and coordinate axes familiar from previous grades to represent
points on the line and in the plane with negative number coordinates;
(i) recognize opposite signs of numbers as
indicating locations on opposite sides of 0 on the number line; recognize that
the opposite of the opposite of a number is the number itself, e.g., - (-3) =
3; and that 0 is its own opposite;
(ii) understand signs of numbers in ordered
pairs as indicating locations in quadrants of the coordinate plane and
recognize that when two ordered pairs differ only by signs, the locations of
the points are related by reflections across one or both axes; and
(iii) find and position integers and other
rational numbers on a horizontal or vertical number line diagram and find and
position pairs of integers and other rational numbers on a coordinate
plane;
(g) understand
ordering and absolute value of rational numbers;
(i) interpret statements of inequality as
statements about the relative position of two numbers on a number line diagram;
for example, interpret -3 > -7 as a statement that -3 is located to the
right of -7 on a number line oriented from left to right;
(ii) write, interpret, and explain statements
of order for rational numbers in real-world contexts; for example, write
-3o C > -7o C to
express the fact that -3o C is warmer than
-7o C;
(iii) understand the absolute value of a
rational number as its distance from 0 on the number line; interpret absolute
value as magnitude for a positive or negative quantity in a real-world
situation; for example, for an account balance of -30 dollars, write |-30| = 30
to describe the size of the debt in dollars; and
(iv) distinguish comparisons of absolute
value from statements about order; for example, recognize that an account
balance less than -30 dollars represents a debt greater than 30
dollars;
(h) solve
real-world and mathematical problems from a variety of cultural contexts,
including those of Montana American Indians, by graphing points in all four
quadrants of the coordinate plane and include use of coordinates and absolute
value to find distances between points with the same first coordinate or the
same second coordinate.
(3) Mathematics expressions and equations content standards for Grade 6 are:
(a) write
and evaluate numerical expressions involving whole-number exponents;
(b) write, read, and evaluate expressions in
which letters stand for numbers;
(i) write
expressions that record operations with numbers and with letters standing for
numbers; for example, express the calculation "subtract y from 5" as 5 -
y;
(ii) identify parts of an
expression using mathematical terms (sum, term, product, factor, quotient,
coefficient); view one or more parts of an expression as a single entity; for
example, describe the expression 2 (8 + 7) as a product of two factors; and
view (8 + 7) as both a single entity and a sum of two terms; and
(iii) evaluate expressions at specific values
of their variables; include expressions that arise from formulas used in
real-world problems; perform arithmetic operations, including those involving
whole-number exponents in the conventional order when there are no parentheses
to specify a particular order (order of operations); for example, use the
formulas V = s3 and A = 6
s2 to find the volume and surface area of a cube
with sides of length s = 1/2;
(c) 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); and apply properties of operations to y + y + y to
produce the equivalent expression 3y;
(d) identify when two expressions are
equivalent (i.e., when the two expressions name the same number regardless of
which value is substituted into them); for example, the expressions y + y + y
and 3y are equivalent because they name the same number regardless of which
number y stands for;
(e) understand
solving an equation or inequality as a process of answering a question: which
values from a specified set, if any, make the equation or inequality true? Use
substitution to determine whether a given number in a specified set makes an
equation or inequality true;
(f)
use variables to represent numbers and write expressions when solving a
real-world or mathematical problem and understand that a variable can represent
an unknown number, or, depending on the purpose at hand, any number in a
specified set;
(g) solve real-world
and mathematical problems by writing and solving equations of the form x + p =
q and px = q for cases in which p, q, and x are all nonnegative rational
numbers;
(h) write an inequality of
the form x > c or x < c to represent a constraint or condition in a
real-world or mathematical problem; recognize that inequalities of the form x
> c or x < c have infinitely many solutions; and represent solutions of
such inequalities on number line diagrams; and
(i) use variables to represent two quantities
in a real-world problem from a variety of cultural contexts, including those of
Montana American Indians, that change in relationship to one another; write an
equation to express one quantity, thought of as the dependent variable, in
terms of the other quantity, thought of as the independent variable; analyze
the relationship between the dependent and independent variables using graphs
and tables, and relate these to the equation; for example, in a problem
involving motion at constant speed, list and graph ordered pairs of distances
and times and write the equation d = 65t to represent the relationship between
distance and time.
(4) Mathematics geometry content standards for Grade 6 are:
(a) find the area of right triangles, other
triangles, special quadrilaterals, and polygons by composing into rectangles or
decomposing into triangles and other shapes; apply these techniques in the
context of solving real-world and mathematical problems within cultural
contexts, including those of Montana American Indians; for example, use Montana
American Indian designs to decompose shapes and find the area;
(b) find the volume of a right rectangular
prism with fractional edge lengths by packing it with unit cubes of the
appropriate unit fraction edge lengths and show that the volume is the same as
would be found by multiplying the edge lengths of the prism and apply the
formulas V = l w h and V = b h to find volumes of right rectangular prisms with
fractional edge lengths in the context of solving real-world and mathematical
problems;
(c) draw polygons in the
coordinate plane given coordinates for the vertices; use coordinates to find
the length of a side joining points with the same first coordinate or the same
second coordinate; and apply these techniques in the context of solving
real-world and mathematical problems; and
(d) represent three-dimensional figures using
nets made up of rectangles and triangles and use the nets to find the surface
area of these figures and apply these techniques in the context of solving
real-world and mathematical problems within cultural contexts, including those
of Montana American Indians.
(5) Mathematics statistics and probability content standards for Grade 6 are:
(a)
recognize a statistical question as one that anticipates variability in the
data related to the question and accounts for it in the answers; for example,
"How old am I?" is not a statistical question, but "How old are the students in
my school?" is a statistical question because one anticipates variability in
students' ages;
(b) understand that
a set of data collected (including Montana American Indian demographic data) to
answer a statistical question has a distribution which can be described by its
center, spread, and overall shape;
(c) recognize that a measure of center for a
numerical data set summarizes all of its values with a single number, while a
measure of variation describes how its values vary with a single
number;
(d) display numerical data
in plots on a number line, including dot plots, histograms, and box plots;
and
(e) summarize numerical data
sets in relation to their context, such as by:
(i) reporting the number of
observations;
(ii) describing the
nature of the attribute under investigation, including how it was measured and
its units of measurement;
(iii)
giving quantitative measures of center (median and/or mean) and variability
(interquartile range and/or mean absolute deviation), as well as describing any
overall pattern and any striking deviations from the overall pattern with
reference to the context in which the data were gathered; and
(iv) relating the choice of measures of
center and variability to the shape of the data distribution and the context in
which the data were gathered.
20-2-114, MCA; IMP, 20-2-121, 20-3-106, 20-7-101, MCA;
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