Skip to main content
California Department of Education Logo

Mathematics Standards




Results


Showing 61 - 70 of 85 Standards

Standard Identifier: G-MG.1

Grade Range: 8–12
Domain: Modeling with Geometry
Discipline: Geometry
Conceptual Category: Geometry

Cluster:
Apply geometric concepts in modeling situations.

Standard:
Use geometric shapes, their measures, and their properties to describe objects (e.g., modeling a tree trunk or a human torso as a cylinder). *

Standard Identifier: G-MG.2

Grade Range: 8–12
Domain: Modeling with Geometry
Discipline: Geometry
Conceptual Category: Geometry

Cluster:
Apply geometric concepts in modeling situations.

Standard:
Apply concepts of density based on area and volume in modeling situations (e.g., persons per square mile, BTUs per cubic foot). *

Standard Identifier: G-MG.3

Grade Range: 8–12
Domain: Modeling with Geometry
Discipline: Geometry
Conceptual Category: Geometry

Cluster:
Apply geometric concepts in modeling situations.

Standard:
Apply geometric methods to solve design problems (e.g., designing an object or structure to satisfy physical constraints or minimize cost; working with typographic grid systems based on ratios). *

Standard Identifier: N-RN.1

Grade Range: 8–12
Domain: The Real Number System
Discipline: Math II
Conceptual Category: Number and Quantity

Cluster:
Extend the properties of exponents to rational exponents.

Standard:
Explain how the definition of the meaning of rational exponents follows from extending the properties of integer exponents to those values, allowing for a notation for radicals in terms of rational exponents. For example, we define 5^1/3 to be the cube root of 5 because we want (5^1/3)^3 = 5(^1/3)^3 to hold, so (5^1/3)^3 must equal 5.

Standard Identifier: N-RN.2

Grade Range: 8–12
Domain: The Real Number System
Discipline: Math II
Conceptual Category: Number and Quantity

Cluster:
Extend the properties of exponents to rational exponents.

Standard:
Rewrite expressions involving radicals and rational exponents using the properties of exponents.

Standard Identifier: N-RN.3

Grade Range: 8–12
Domain: The Real Number System
Discipline: Math II
Conceptual Category: Number and Quantity

Cluster:
Use properties of rational and irrational numbers.

Standard:
Explain why the sum or product of two rational numbers is rational; that the sum of a rational number and an irrational number is irrational; and that the product of a nonzero rational number and an irrational number is irrational.

Standard Identifier: F-IF.4

Grade Range: 9–12
Domain: Interpreting Functions
Discipline: Math III
Conceptual Category: Functions

Cluster:
Interpret functions that arise in applications in terms of the context. [Include rational, square root and cube root; emphasize selection of appropriate models.]

Standard:
For a function that models a relationship between two quantities, interpret key features of graphs and tables in terms of the quantities, and sketch graphs showing key features given a verbal description of the relationship. Key features include: intercepts; intervals where the function is increasing, decreasing, positive, or negative; relative maximums and minimums; symmetries; end behavior; and periodicity. *

Standard Identifier: F-IF.4

Grade Range: 9–12
Domain: Interpreting Functions
Discipline: Algebra II
Conceptual Category: Functions

Cluster:
Interpret functions that arise in applications in terms of the context. [Emphasize selection of appropriate models.]

Standard:
For a function that models a relationship between two quantities, interpret key features of graphs and tables in terms of the quantities, and sketch graphs showing key features given a verbal description of the relationship. Key features include: intercepts; intervals where the function is increasing, decreasing, positive, or negative; relative maximums and minimums; symmetries; end behavior; and periodicity. *

Standard Identifier: F-IF.5

Grade Range: 9–12
Domain: Interpreting Functions
Discipline: Algebra II
Conceptual Category: Functions

Cluster:
Interpret functions that arise in applications in terms of the context. [Emphasize selection of appropriate models.]

Standard:
Relate the domain of a function to its graph and, where applicable, to the quantitative relationship it describes. For example, if the function h gives the number of person-hours it takes to assemble n engines in a factory, then the positive integers would be an appropriate domain for the function.*

Standard Identifier: F-IF.5

Grade Range: 9–12
Domain: Interpreting Functions
Discipline: Math III
Conceptual Category: Functions

Cluster:
Interpret functions that arise in applications in terms of the context. [Include rational, square root and cube root; emphasize selection of appropriate models.]

Standard:
Relate the domain of a function to its graph and, where applicable, to the quantitative relationship it describes. *

Showing 61 - 70 of 85 Standards


Questions: Curriculum Frameworks and Instructional Resources Division | CFIRD@cde.ca.gov | 916-319-0881