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Showing 21 - 30 of 81 Standards

Standard Identifier: 7.NS.2.d

Grade: 7
Domain: The Number System

Cluster:
Apply and extend previous understandings of operations with fractions to add, subtract, multiply, and divide rational numbers.

Standard:
Apply and extend previous understandings of multiplication and division and of fractions to multiply and divide rational numbers. Convert a rational number to a decimal using long division; know that the decimal form of a rational number terminates in 0s or eventually repeats.

Standard Identifier: 7.NS.3

Grade: 7
Domain: The Number System

Cluster:
Apply and extend previous understandings of operations with fractions to add, subtract, multiply, and divide rational numbers.

Standard:
Solve real-world and mathematical problems involving the four operations with rational numbers.

Footnote:
Computations with rational numbers extend the rules for manipulating fractions to complex fractions.

Standard Identifier: 8.NS.1

Grade: 8
Domain: The Number System

Cluster:
Know that there are numbers that are not rational, and approximate them by rational numbers.

Standard:
Know that numbers that are not rational are called irrational. Understand informally that every number has a decimal expansion; for rational numbers show that the decimal expansion repeats eventually, and convert a decimal expansion which repeats eventually into a rational number.

Standard Identifier: 8.NS.2

Grade: 8
Domain: The Number System

Cluster:
Know that there are numbers that are not rational, and approximate them by rational numbers.

Standard:
Use rational approximations of irrational numbers to compare the size of irrational numbers, locate them approximately on a number line diagram, and estimate the value of expressions (e.g.,π^2). For example, by truncating the decimal expansion of √2, show that √2 is between 1 and 2, then between 1.4 and 1.5, and explain how to continue on to get better approximations.

Standard Identifier: N-CN.1

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

Cluster:
Perform arithmetic operations with complex numbers. [i^2 as highest power of i]

Standard:
Know there is a complex number i such that i^2 = −1, and every complex number has the form a + bi with a and b real.

Standard Identifier: N-CN.2

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

Cluster:
Perform arithmetic operations with complex numbers. [i^2 as highest power of i]

Standard:
Use the relation i^2 = −1 and the commutative, associative, and distributive properties to add, subtract, and multiply complex numbers.

Standard Identifier: N-CN.7

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

Cluster:
Use complex numbers in polynomial identities and equations. [Quadratics with real coefficients]

Standard:
Solve quadratic equations with real coefficients that have complex solutions.

Standard Identifier: N-CN.8

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

Cluster:
Use complex numbers in polynomial identities and equations. [Quadratics with real coefficients]

Standard:
(+) Extend polynomial identities to the complex numbers. For example, rewrite x^2 + 4 as (x + 2i)(x – 2i).

Standard Identifier: N-CN.9

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

Cluster:
Use complex numbers in polynomial identities and equations. [Quadratics with real coefficients]

Standard:
(+) Know the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra; show that it is true for quadratic polynomials.

Standard Identifier: S-CP.1

Grade Range: 8–12
Domain: Conditional Probability and the Rules of Probability
Discipline: Math II
Conceptual Category: Statistics and Probability

Cluster:
Understand independence and conditional probability and use them to interpret data. [Link to data from simulations or experiments.]

Standard:
Describe events as subsets of a sample space (the set of outcomes) using characteristics (or categories) of the outcomes, or as unions, intersections, or complements of other events (“or,” “and,” “not”). *

Showing 21 - 30 of 81 Standards


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