Greatest common factor anchor chart

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an anchor chart for posters and notebooks

This anchor chart for greatest common factor and least common multiple will help your middle school, especially 6th grade math students solve problems that require GCF and LCM. We prefer to keep notes simple and neat so as not to overwhelm the student while teaching and to keep them focused on essential information. Hang them on the wall as posters and give students copies for their math journals or interactive notebooks to reference during future activities.

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a cake with candles on it and the words gcf lgm with the cake method

Finding GCF and LCM with the Upside-down Cake Method - When I first came across the ladder method (ie: the upside-down cake method) for finding greatest common factors and lowest common multiples, I thought it was nothing short of complete genius. In this post, the cake method for finding GCF and LCM is explained. There are also free pdf math word wall references to download for your math classroom.

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a white board with writing on it that says fractions and simplest form i identify the greatest common factor

Display an anchor chart to help your students remember how to simplify fractions to their simplest form!

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It's Five for Friday on a Saturday!! :) Time to link up with Kacey from Doodle Bugs Teaching. :) This week we finally got to teaching GCF/LCM within word problems. The students theoretically learned GCF/LCM in 4th grade, but applying it to word problems was a challenge. We started off by reviewing LCM/GCF. I shared with the students how I DISLIKE factor rainbows. In my opinion they are not as easy to use as a table, so that is why I taught them to make a table if the numbers are smaller…

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the worksheet for factor and fraction numbers is shown in this graphic diagram, which shows

The greatest common factor and least common multiple algebraically separate a number into factors. Learn how these concepts are useful with examples here!

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