Same Expression — What Does h Mean?
Both cards use
A Variable Can Play Two Roles
-
Unknown — one specific value to find
satisfies ; substitution works
-
Ranging value — any number in a set
could be 10, 20, 30 — no single answer
Same expression
Always Define the Variable First
Before writing any expression, write a declaration:
"Let
= the number of hours Maria works."
- If
is unknown: the declaration sets up your solve - If
is ranging: the declaration describes the relationship
Without it,
Quick Check: Unknown or Ranging?
Classify the variable in each scenario.
- A bag holds marbles — 14 total. Let
= marbles in bag. - A painter charges $25/hr. Let
= hours this week. - A number squared equals 49. Let
= the number.
One specific value, or could be any value?
The Role Determines Your Next Step
| Role | Example | Next step |
|---|---|---|
| Unknown | Solve — find the one value | |
| Ranging | Describe — expression is the answer |
Ask first: "Specific value, or all possibilities?"
Four Patterns for Translating Phrases
| Verbal phrase | Pattern | Expression |
|---|---|---|
| "6 more than |
Additive | |
| "4 less than a number" | Subtractive | |
| "3 times a number" | Multiplicative | |
| "5 less than twice a number" | Two-operation |
English word order does not always match symbol order.
Additive Translation Goes Both Ways
Words → Expression:
- "6 more than
" → - "A number decreased by 4" →
Expression → Words:
: a number increased by 6 : 4 less than a number
Any valid description counts.
Predict: Which Expression Is Correct?
"4 less than
- A.
- B.
Pick A or B before turning the page.
Hint: "less than" tells you where to start.
Subtraction Order: Reference Goes First
"4 less than
Check with
✓ Four less than ten is six. ✗ Negative — wrong direction.
Multiplicative and Division Translation Patterns
"3 times a number" →
"A number divided by 2" →
Numerator rule:
- "Number divided by 2" —
divided → on top - "2 divided by a number" — 2 divided →
on top
The divided quantity goes in the numerator.
Your Turn: Write Four Expressions
Write an expression. Define the variable first with a "Let…" statement.
- "Seven more than a number"
- "A number decreased by 9"
- "The product of 5 and a number"
- "A number divided by 4"
Try all four, then advance for the answers.
Two-Operation Expressions: Building Inside Out
"5 less than twice a number" →
Step 1: "Twice
Step 2: "5 less than that" →
Test
Wrong:
Error Analysis: Spot the Mistake
A student wrote this for "4 less than a number":
Your tasks:
- Apply the reasonableness check — use
- Explain in one sentence why it is wrong
- Write the correct expression
Work it out, then advance.
One Expression Describes Many Situations
Given:
Task: Write a word problem this could model.
Two student examples:
- "I bought
packs of stickers (3 each) plus 2 extra" - "A plumber charges $3/foot of pipe plus a $2 fee"
Both correct — one expression, many real-world stories.
Your Turn: Translate and Create
No scaffolding. Write your "Let…" statement first for each.
Part 1 — Write expressions:
- "8 more than twice a number"
- "A number divided by 3, decreased by 5"
Part 2 — Write a word problem for
Try all three independently, then advance.
Two Common Mistakes Worth Remembering
Mistake 1: "6 less than
Reasonableness:
Mistake 2: "Write an expression" →
No value asked? Stop at the expression.
What You Can Now Do
✓ Classify a variable: unknown or ranging
✓ Define first — "Let
✓ Subtraction: "4 less than
✓ Two-operation: inside-out →
Reasonableness check catches subtraction reversal
Don't set equal unless a value is asked for
Next Lesson: Expressions Become Equations
In 6.EE.B.7 you will set expressions equal to a given value and solve.
The "define the variable" step from today is the setup.
Every equation you write in 6.EE.B.7 starts with a correct expression.
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Use variables to represent numbers and write expressions