Same Cost, Two Different Forms
You buy 3 items, each priced at
- Option A:
— factor times a sum - Option B:
— expanded terms
Try
Pick a form and compute before advancing.
What Makes Two Expressions Equivalent
Equivalent expressions give the same value for every variable value.
| Match? | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 4 | 18 | 18 | ✓ |
| 1 | 9 | 9 | ✓ |
Same output every time — these expressions are equivalent.
Area Model: Why Distribution Works
Total area =
Arrow Annotation: Count Every Term
- One arrow per inside term — one product per arrow
- Two terms inside → two arrows → two products
- Draw arrows before computing — every time
Expanding: Two and Three Terms
Verify at
Your Turn: Expand and Verify
Expand
- Draw one arrow from 4 to each term inside
- Write the product each arrow represents
- Write the expanded expression
- Verify at
: does equal your answer?
Draw your arrows before writing any numbers.
From Expanded Back to Factored
You expanded:
Now the question flips:
Starting from
The same operation runs in reverse.
Factoring Means Finding the GCF
Factoring reverses distribution — pull out the GCF of all terms.
Factor
- Factors of 24 and 18 share: 1, 2, 3, 6
- GCF = 6
Inside-check: do 4x and 3y share a factor? No — done.
Watch Out: Use the Full GCF
Inside-check:
3 and 2 share no factor — complete.
Your Turn: Factor and Check
Factor
- List factors of 15 and factors of 10
- Identify the GCF
- Write the factored form
- Inside-check: do the terms inside share any factor?
Verify by expanding back — does it give
Like Terms Share the Same Variable
Like terms share the same variable and exponent.
and — like (same variable ) and — like (same variable ) and — unlike (different variables)
Add the coefficients — the variable part stays unchanged.
Addition vs. Multiplication of Variables
— addition counts copies → coefficient — multiplication stacks copies → exponent
Ask first: addition or multiplication?
Combining Terms with Two Variable Groups
Combine
-terms: -terms:- Result:
Can we combine
Apples and oranges can't be added together.
Three Groups: Variables and Constants
Combine
-terms:- Constants:
- Result:
Constants are like terms with each other — numbers without variables form their own group.
Different Variables Cannot Be Combined
You see
has variable ; the has no variable- Unlike terms — they cannot combine
is already fully simplified
Name each term's variable before combining — stop if they differ.
Expand, Then Combine: Two Steps
Simplify
Step 1 — Expand (Chunk 1):
Step 2 — Combine like terms (Chunk 3):
Two operations from today, applied in sequence.
Your Turn: Expand Then Combine Terms
Simplify
- Step 1: Expand
— draw your arrows first - Step 2: Identify the like terms in the full expression
- Step 3: Combine them
Name each step as you go: "I'm expanding" then "I'm combining."
Three Tools for Equivalent Expressions
✓ Expand: outside factor reaches every inside term
✓ Factor: pull out GCF; inside-check confirms done
✓ Combine: add coefficients of like terms only
Every term needs its own arrow
Inside-check — non-GCF leaves work unfinished
Next Lesson: Identifying Equivalent Expressions
You can now produce equivalent expressions — you know how to get from one form to another.
The next lesson asks: given two expressions someone else wrote, how do you identify whether they're equivalent?
The substitution check you practiced today is your starting tool.
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Apply the properties of operations to generate equivalent expressions