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Order of Operations with No Exponents a PEMDAS Math Mystery Activity Worksheets

Rated 4.89 out of 5, based on 28 reviews
4.9 (28 ratings)
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Kiwiland
3.6k Followers
Grade Levels
3rd - 8th, Homeschool
Standards
Formats Included
  • PDF
Pages
15 pages
$4.00
$4.00
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Kiwiland
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What educators are saying

This is a fun and engaging way for students to practice the basics of order of operations! My students keep asking the next one!
I loved this resource for my third graders! We were having issues with two step problems and this really helped!

Description

If your students are learning to use parentheses in order of operations with addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division equations. Then these Mini Math Mysteries activities and order of operations worksheets are perfect for your students to capture their imagination. They can be used in class, for a homework activity, or assessment worksheet as students begin to learn how to solve numerical expressions.

These worksheets are WITHOUT exponents and NO negative numbers so are perfect to introduce your students to PEMDAS and BEDMAS. They are fun math activities that are designed to be done in one class period each.

There are 5 x Math Mystery Order of Operations Worksheets in this pack. At the top of each worksheet is a story to set the scene of the math mystery, students then answer the questions to narrow down the suspects and options until they have solved these fun daily math questions.

Mini Math Mysteries Included

  • The Missing Phone
  • The Missing Teacher
  • The Principals Car
  • The Bank Job
  • Diamond Heist

Math Mysteries are an independent escape room (or crack the code) type of activity where instead of using locks, students identify suspects with puzzles and word problems.

Enjoy these math worksheets and please remember to follow me by clicking the following link to easily find my latest resources and receive discounts.

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Thank you

Kiwiland

Total Pages
15 pages
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
N/A
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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Use parentheses, brackets, or braces in numerical expressions, and evaluate expressions with these symbols.
Write simple expressions that record calculations with numbers, and interpret numerical expressions without evaluating them. For example, express the calculation “add 8 and 7, then multiply by 2” as 2 × (8 + 7). Recognize that 3 × (18932 + 921) is three times as large as 18932 + 921, without having to calculate the indicated sum or product.

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3.6k Followers