Equivalence: Same Output, Every Input
"The two expressions name the same number regardless of which value is substituted."
— CCSS 6.EE.A.4
Two expressions are equivalent when they produce the same output for every possible input — not just one or two values we happen to test.
Testing y + y + y and 3y
Every row matches — the expressions produce the same output for each value of
Does One Match Prove Equivalence?
Look at these two expressions:
Test
| Value | ||
|---|---|---|
Both give 12. Are they equivalent?
One Matching Test Is Not Enough
| Value | ||
|---|---|---|
| 12 | 12 ✓ | |
| 11 | 10 ✗ |
The coincidence trap:
Does One Match Prove It?
True or false:
If two expressions give the same result when
, they are equivalent.
Think before advancing — what would you need to show to prove equivalence?
Substitution Tests vs. Algebraic Proof
- Disprove — one mismatch is conclusive; stop there
- Suggest — matches support equivalence but can't prove it for every value
- Algebra proves it — simplify both expressions to the same form; the match holds for all values
Testing and Confirming Equivalence: Two Steps
Step 1 — Substitute two or more values
- Any mismatch → not equivalent, stop
- All rows match → go to Step 2
Step 2 — Verify algebraically
- Simplify both expressions; if they reach the same form → equivalent
Pair A: Are These Equivalent?
Step 1 — Substitute
| Value | ||
|---|---|---|
Step 2 — Simplify algebraically:
Both sides are identical — equivalent ✓
Pair B: Are These Equivalent?
Step 1 — Substitute
| Value | ||
|---|---|---|
Mismatch — stop. Not equivalent.
Note:
Pair C: Are These Equivalent?
Step 1 — Substitute two values:
| Value | ||
|---|---|---|
Step 2 — Distribute:
Equivalent ✓
Pair D: Are These Equivalent?
Step 1 — Substitute
| Value | ||
|---|---|---|
Mismatch — stop. Not equivalent.
These share the same symbols, but
Your Turn: Classify These Pairs
Apply the two-step method to each pair.
Pair E:
Pair F:
Substitute two values first. Mismatch → done. All match → Step 2 algebra. Work both before advancing.
Answers: Pair E and Pair F
Pair E:
- Substitute
: vs. ✗ - Mismatch at Step 1 —
, not
Pair F:
- Substitute
: vs. ✓; : vs. ✓ - Step 2:
✓
What to Remember and Watch Out For
✓ Equivalence means same output for every value — a universal claim, not a lucky coincidence
✓ One mismatch is conclusive proof of non-equivalence — stop and record
✓ Algebra confirms what substitution can only suggest: simplify to the same form
Watch out: One matching test is not proof — it could be a coincidence (x + 6 and 2x both give 12 at x = 6)
Watch out: Distribute to every term —
Watch out: Shared symbols don't mean equivalent —
Coming Up Next: Solving Equations
6.EE.B.5 asks the opposite question:
Which specific value makes two non-equivalent expressions equal?
That's solving an equation. The key contrast:
- Equivalence = interchangeable for all values
- Equation solution = equal at one specific value
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Identify when two expressions are equivalent