Math get to know you activity
6 Math Icebreakers | Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Icebreakers for Math Teachers
Find new ways to have fun with math in the classroom! There are many times you may need to break the ice in a classroom. It can be during the first day when students are just meeting each other. It can also be later in the year if you want to start a new part of the math curriculum with a fun, interactive lesson. We have curated math icebreaker activities from across the Shaped archives to help introduce students to math concepts and have a good time while doing it.
Elementary Math Icebreakers
#1. Figure Me Out (Grades 2–5)
In July 2020, we put together icebreaker activities for elementary students being mindful of activities that could be done both in person or remotely. In one of them, we suggest having students create an equation that shows off their personality to their classmates.
Challenge students to create equations that represent various numerical facts about themselves. For instance, a child named Brian could write the equation 35/7=____ or 3+2=____ for the number of letters in his first name. Let's say Brian is 10 years old. He might write the equation 100/10=____ as the clue to his age.
Classmates can solve the equations and use the clues to figure out whose stats are shown. This back-to-school icebreaker activity will help students get to know one another while providing you with valuable insights into their math skills.
#2. Diagram Your Class (Grade 5)
The Venn diagram is more than a math object. It's a way of organizing ideas that span every subject. In April 2021, we put together a list of 5th grade math activities and games, including this one using Venn diagrams, that is a useful lesson to spark student conversation.
- Choose 3 categories that your students would be interested in identifying with, for example "Has Dogs," "Has Cats," and "Has Fish." (You can change these to any three categories your students would like. They don't need to be related for this activity to work, but if they are, it promotes richer discussion.)
- Publicly display a Venn diagram of the categories that the students can interact with.
- Students identify where they fall within the Venn diagram. If completing the activity in person, have students write their name on a sticky note and place it in the spot that represents them. If completing the activity remotely, consider using a digital platform.
- Facilitate a discussion around what you and your students observe. For example, “About what percent of the class has cats?” “What conclusions can be drawn from the data?” “What fraction of pet owners have dogs?
Middle School Math Icebreakers
#3. Museum Exhibit (Grades 4–6)
Many students have been to a museum. But have they ever considered creating one? Give this lesson, taken from our blog full of Memorial Day math activities, a try and let your students have some fun working in groups as they showcase their creativity.
Tell students they get to run a history museum completely out of their imagination. First, have them invent the museum. Encourage creative names and illustrations!
- Name of Museum (example: Jose’s Museum of Iraq)
- Location of Museum (example: Miami, Florida)
Now suppose their museum is planning a special exhibit for an upcoming holiday. What objects would they like to display for the exhibit? Have them think about the different kinds of objects that can tell a story and draw a crowd. Would their museum have art in its collection? Photographs? Letters?
- What objects will the museum feature for this exhibit?
- What is your budget for the exhibit? (example: $1 million)
Finally, have students plan how to get their budget back. This requires not just calculating how many tickets they have to sell but also thinking about questions like how to get people to come in the first place. Encourage students to use mathematical language in their explanations.
- How much would you charge per ticket?
- How many tickets would you need to sell to get your money back?
- How will you attract people to come to your exhibit?
You can pair this with other museum-related activities available on Shaped, such as our round-up of free virtual museum field trips and lessons on teaching math using the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
#4. Design a Parade Float (Grades 5–9)
Find additional inspiration from our Memorial Day activities and get out those markers, crayons, and pencils for this lesson! Your community is holding a holiday parade, and they don't just want you in it—they want you to design a float for it.
Have students draw their float. It may help to show them pictures of other parade floats so they have an idea of what typically goes on them. Will they need costumes? A sound system? Balloons? When they're finished drawing their float, have them measure it, too. How wide is it? How tall is it?
Now students should calculate the cost of building the float. Have them think about every material listed and estimate how much of each material they would need. For example:
- Amount of wood?
- Amount of metal?
- Amount of wire and papier-mâché?
- Speakers and generator?
Have students research the cost of each material online and calculate the total cost based on quantity. How much money would they need to ask the school for in order to build the float?
To extend the activity, tell students to imagine that the principal says, “If you can reduce the costs by 10%, I’ll give you the money to buy everything.” How would they reduce the costs by 10%? Feel free to modify the question by having the principal instead list a different requirement, such as to “divide the costs in half” or “reduce the costs by 90%.” Try to match this activity with the lesson and students you’re teaching.
High School Math Icebreaker Games & Activities
#5. Number Facts Pass (Grades 9–12)
Begin this high school icebreaker by modeling it: State your name, and then name a number and one of its features—for example, “49” followed by “perfect square. ” Have each student introduces themselves and share a different number that shares the feature (for example, 64). The next student must think of a different feature for that number (for example, “even number’), and the next student must name a different number with that feature (for example, 12). Continue passing from student to student until everyone has named both a number and a feature; they should also be introducing themselves when it's their turn to speak.
Depending on students’ skill levels, consider requiring that every number be a fraction, decimal, expression, or imaginary number. If playing in person, students can randomly choose the next classmate who must name either a number or a fact about a number. This method can be adapted virtually by placing everyone’s name on a list and randomly generating names, one at a time.
#6. Play a Card or Board Game (All Grades)
Who said learning math couldn’t be fun? Icebreakers for math teachers can come from sources outside of math education. While there are plenty of games that have been designed with math learning in mind, so many games can become math icebreakers in the hands of a determined teacher. From our post of summer math activities, choose any game you already enjoy playing that includes points, money, or strategic thinking—which gives you an awful lot of options! Look for ways to layer math talk on top of the game:
- What strategy did you use?
- How would your score change if you had made this move instead?
- What types of game decisions take the most time to decide on?
***
Find more ideas to teach multiplication with HMH Into Math, a core mathematics curriculum for grades K–8 that inspires students to see the value and purpose of math in their daily lives through rewarding, real-life activities and lessons.
Getting to Know You Activities for Middle School Math
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Six Back to School Activities for Middle School
Always looking for new getting to know you activities for your middle school math classes? Me too!
I’ve got a few getting to know you activities for you and your middle school math students, for the beginning of the school year of even the beginning of a new semester or marking period!
Getting to Know You Activity: The Name Game
I used this game for many years…. .many times I’d plan not to, but then I couldn’t stand not knowing kids’ names right away, so we’d play:-)
Students and I get into a big circle, and I ask students to come up with an adjective that describes them and begins with the same sound as the beginning of their first name, like ‘Energetic Ellie.” The first student to my left shares his/her name; the 2nd student repeats the 1st student’s name and then shares his own. The third student repeats the first two names/adjectives, and adds her own. The activity continues in this way around the circle until we get to me, and I get to repeat all the names.
This game helps me to get to know all the students’ names during the first class session. It also helps me learn about the students – it tells me who seems to have a good memory and who has more difficulty. I can see who appears to be confident and who is more hesitant; who’s willing to accept help (I always prompt if they want/need) and who isn’t. And of course, their adjectives usually tell me something about them:-)
Students get to learn a little bit about each other too. They come from quite a few different elementary schools, so many of them don’t know anyone….this helps them learn at least a few names and faces to start off the year.
Getting to Know You Truth or Dare Game
Truth or Dare….students are intrigued when they hear the name! Especially in math class!
“Math Truth or Dare – Getting to Know You” is a set of 30 questions you can use to get to know your students and to help your students get to know each other
- There are 15 “Truth” question cards and 15 “Dare” question cards.
- Most of the questions do not have a “correct” answer because they are about the students, so if more than 15 students choose to answer a “truth” question or a “dare” question, then the questions can be used again.
- Truth questions ask about the students
- Dare questions ask students to complete math computations (some of the computations are based on facts about the student, so these can also be used again, as students’ answers may be different. )
- You can grab this free resource on TPT.
Getting to Know You Activity: Back to School Footloose
This particular Footloose version has two purposes:
1) It’s a short pre-assessment to see what students know coming into the year (geared toward 6th grade), AND
2) It includes getting to know you questions….even if students answer the math question incorrectly, you’re still learning a personal fact about them:-)
- Students solve each of the 24 problems and record their answers in the corresponding boxes on their Footloose grids.
- Then, according to the answer, they respond to a getting to know you question and record that answer in the same box on the grid.
- You can grab this free resource on TPT too.
Getting to Know You Activities: Math About Me and Who Can you Find?
Math About Me
This getting to know you activity is a series of math-related questions for students, to help you understand more about their math ‘status’ – how they feel about math, what they like/dislike, etc.
Who Can You Find?
This one is great for helping students get to know each other. Many of the questions again tie into math.
You can grab the free Math About Me and Who Can You Find here.
Getting to Know You Activity: Meet the Mathematician
This is an easy way for students to share a little about themselves in math world!
- Students can work creatively, and take some time to color the background.
- Students can get into small groups and share their mathematician facts:-)
- These also make a great display!
- You can grab this getting to know you Meet the Mathematician wheel on TPT
At least a few of these getting to know you activities should fit perfectly into your first days of math class, when you head back to school or into that new marking period!
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Take the test | 1 | Simple addition and subtraction problems | Stepanova Elena Grigoryevna, "Secondary School No. 33 named after Hero of Russia Sergeant N.V. Smirnov", Cheboksary |
Pass test | 2 - 3 | Multiplication and division | Gilmullina Ilsoyar Gabdraisovna, MBOU "Bekhterevskaya secondary school", Tatarstan. |
Pass test | 2 - 3 | Movement tasks | Sorokina Lyubov Anatolyevna, secondary school No. 17, p. Shira, Republic of Khakassia |
Pass test | 4 | Primary school mathematics course | Smykalova Elena Vladimirovna, FML No. 366, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 4 | Mathematics, I semester | Staroverova Valentina Vasilievna, GBOU School No. 212, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 4 | Units | Chizhova Yana Mikhailovna. Secondary school No. 849, Moscow. |
Pass test | 4 - 7 | Boxes | Shagay Maria Alekseevna, undergraduate of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 4 - 7 | Sets | Tubyanskaya Ekaterina Pavlovna, undergraduate of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Hercena, St. Petersburg, teacher of mathematics, secondary school No. 635 |
Pass test | 5 | Mathematics course | Smykalova Elena Vladimirovna, FML No. 366, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 | Numbering of natural numbers | Yamasheva Larisa Nikolaevna, MBOU "Verkhneshipkinskaya secondary school", Tatarstan |
Pass test | 5 | Decimals | Rogozhnikova Anna Ivanovna, Zainskaya secondary school No. 6, Tatarstan |
Pass test | 5 | Addition and subtraction of natural numbers | Yamasheva Larisa Nikolaevna, MBOU "Verkhneshipkinskaya secondary school", Tatarstan |
Pass test | 5 | Common fractions | Sukhanova Tatyana Nikolaevna, Barabo-Yudinskaya secondary school, Novosibirsk region. |
Pass test | 5 | Multiplication and division of natural numbers | Tsyger Olga Viktorovna, MBOU "Secondary School No. 87", Tomsk Region |
Pass test | 5 | Mixed numbers | Olga Alexandrovna Zolotova, secondary school No. 30, Tambov |
Pass test | 5 | Equations | Vasina Galina Alexandrovna, Boldovskaya secondary school, Republic of Mordovia |
Pass test | 5 | Problems for addition and subtraction of natural numbers | Novikova Olga Aleksandrovna, "Shchekoldinskaya OOSh", Shchekoldino village, Tver region. |
Pass test | 5 | Cuboid | Vershinina Anna Alexandrovna, master student of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Hercena, St. Petersburg, teacher of mathematics, secondary school No. 553 |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Interest | Mironchuk Irina Stepanovna, secondary school No. 230, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Adding and subtracting decimals | Savelyeva Marina Eduardovna, secondary school No. 76, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Multiplication and division of decimals | Gavrilova Larisa Albertovna, secondary school named after. K. Ivanova, Bashkortostan. |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Multiplication and division of common fractions | Perevalova Elena Valentinovna, MBOU "OOSH No. 5", Krasnoturinsk |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Addition and subtraction of rational numbers | Gavrilova Larisa Albertovna, secondary school named after. K. Ivanova, Bashkortostan |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Perimeter and area | Ludmila Rudolfovna Lukyanchenko, secondary school No. 7, Adygea. |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Decimals. Translation, comparison | Sashchenko Lada Anatolyevna. School No. 559, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Multiplication and division of common, mixed and decimal fractions | Yulia Isfandiyarovna Kostyuk, undergraduate of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Mathematical language. Language and logic. | Grade 5-6, Kucherenko Alexandra Dmitrievna, master student of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Integers. | Gaus Nadezhda Pavlovna, master student of the Russian State Pedagogical University named after A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Plot tasks for movement | Alena Viktorovna Petrova, intern at the Russian State Pedagogical University named after A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Solution of problems for movement along the river | Trubinsh Inita Andreevna, trainee of the Russian State Pedagogical University named after. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Geometric figures | Raynova Daria Sergeevna, trainee of the Russian State Pedagogical University named after. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Divisibility | Lidia Vadimovna Putova, undergraduate of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Angles and their types. Angle bisector | Petropavlovskaya Anna Andreevna, undergraduate of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Tasks about clocks | Ivanova Elena Alekseevna, undergraduate of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Math games | Droyaronova Violetta Anatolyevna, undergraduate of the Russian State Pedagogical University named after. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 - 6 | Number systems | Pavlov Dmitry Alexandrovich, master student of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Hercena, St. Petersburg, teacher of mathematics, State Budgetary Educational Institution "Presidential FML No. 239" |
Pass test | 5 - 9 | Euler-Venn circles | Scherbina Polina Alekseevna, master student of the Russian State Pedagogical University named after A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 5 - 10 | Logic tasks. Part 1 | Gavrilova Larisa Albertovna, secondary school 519, St. Petersburg. |
Pass test | 5 - 10 | Logic tasks. Part 2 | Gavrilova Larisa Albertovna, secondary school 519, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 6 | Mathematics course | Smykalova Elena Vladimirovna, FML No. 366, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 6 | Divisibility of numbers | Yamasheva Larisa Nikolaevna, MBOU "Verkhneshipkinskaya secondary school", Tatarstan |
Pass test | 6 | Addition and subtraction of common fractions | Yamasheva Larisa Nikolaevna, MBOU "Verkhneshipkinskaya secondary school", Tatarstan |
Pass test | 6 | Comparison of common fractions | Antropova Elza Valerievna, GBOU secondary school No. 539, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 6 | Multiplication and division of rational numbers | Tyulyukina Oksana Alexandrovna, MK OU secondary school No. 24, Irkutsk region. |
Pass test | 6 | Rational numbers | Sycheva Oksana Ivanovna, MBOU secondary school No. 9, Ust-Ilimsk, Irkutsk region |
Pass test | 6 | Mixed numbers. Addition and subtraction of mixed numbers | Eliseeva Olga Borisovna, GBOU secondary school No. 242, St. Petersburg. |
Pass test | 6 | Greatest common divisor and least common multiple | Bugaeva Marina Vladislavovna, secondary school No. 62, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 6 | Plane coordinates | Nekrasova Svetlana Yurievna, secondary school with. Kozmino, Arkhangelsk region. |
Pass test | 6 | Equations with one unknown | Roslyakova Irina Anatolyevna, Secondary school No. 14, Bratsk |
Pass test | 6 | Diagrams and graphs | Belova Irina Alexandrovna. Gymnasium No. 13, Aleksin, Tula region. |
Pass test | 6 | Positive and negative numbers. Coordinate line | Radzhabova Ramziya Juraevna, MBOU Poruchikovskaya secondary school of the Zainsky municipal district of the Republic of Tatarstan |
Pass test | 6 | Number module | Fedoseeva Veronika Yurievna, intern at the Russian State Pedagogical University named after A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 6 | Direct and inverse proportionality | Goncharova Maria Alekseevna, Kemerovo Presidential Cadet School, Kemerovo |
Pass test | 6 | Distributive property of multiplication | Korneeva Larisa Albertovna, GBOU secondary school No. 519, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 6 | Finding a part of a number and a number from its part | Morozova Evgenia Alexandrovna, "Kemerovo Presidential Cadet School", Kemerovo |
Pass test | 6 - 7 | Periodic fractions | Anastasia Dostovalova, intern at the Russian State Pedagogical University named after A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 6 - 9 | Relations and proportions | Ivanova Irina Leonidovna, school No. 149, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 7 | Monomials and polynomials | Kolesova Alla Olegovna, MOU secondary school "Basic comprehensive school No. 9", Mezhdurechensk |
Pass test | 7 | Factorization of polynomials | Udalova Elena Mikhailovna, GBOU secondary school No. 579, Saint Petersburg |
Pass test | 7 | Relations between sides and angles of a triangle | Ponomareva Elena Vladimirovna, GBOU secondary school No. 156 with in-depth study of informatics of the Kalininsky district of St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 7 | Properties of degree with natural index | Shelest Ekaterina Yulievna, Andreevskaya secondary school, Dnepropetrovsk region |
Pass test | 7 | Linear function and its graph | Sokolova Olga Evgenievna, Kashira, Moscow Region |
Pass test | 7 | Triangles | Nuraneeva Gulshat Kasimovna, Chistopol secondary school No. 5, Tatarstan |
Pass test | 7 | Parallel straight lines | Elena Sergeevna Tolkacheva, Gymnasium No. 13, Aleksina, Tula Region |
Pass test | 7 | Initial geometric information | Napalkova Tatyana Lvovna, secondary school No. 4 of the Altai Territory, Gornyak |
Pass test | 7 | Reduced multiplication formulas | Rogozhnikova Anna Ivanovna, school number 6, Zainsk |
Pass test | 7 | Algebra. Final test | Bugaeva Marina Vladislavovna, secondary school No. 62, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 7 | Reduced multiplication formulas, factorization of polynomials | Ishmakova Irina Evgenievna. Gymnasium "Alma Mater", St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 7 | Abbreviated multiplication formulas. | Bilchugova Tatyana Sergeevna, undergraduate of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 7 | Right triangles | Buivolova Kristina Sergeevna, graduate student of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Hercena, St. Petersburg, teacher of mathematics, secondary school No. 625 |
Pass test | 7 | Modulo division and comparison | Ilyicheva Svetlana Veniaminovna, undergraduate of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 7 | Triangle and its elements | Levina Alina Igorevna, graduate student of the Russian State Pedagogical University named after A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 7 | Movement charts | Gavrikova Tatyana Anatolyevna, undergraduate of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Gertsena, St. Petersburg, teacher of mathematics, secondary school No. 594 |
Pass test | 7 - 8 | Circumferential tasks | Lopatina Anna Sergeevna, undergraduate of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 7 - 9 | Equations with one unknown, reduced to linear | Ivanova Irina Leonidovna, school No. 149, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 7 - 9 | Equations with one unknown | Pavlova Natalia Nikolaevna, secondary school No. 43, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 7 - 9 | Systems of two linear equations in two unknowns | Gavrilova Larisa Albertovna, secondary school named after. K. Ivanova, Bashkortostan. |
Pass test | 7 - 9 | Triangles | Bukina Olesya Alekseevna, Meshalkina Olga Gennadievna, MBOU Lyceum No. 2, Barnaul |
Pass test | 7 - 9 | Reduced multiplication formulas | Bazhanova Irina Leonidovna, Rassvetovskaya secondary school, Rassvet village, Lodeynopolsky district |
Pass test | 7 - 9 | Basic Quadratic Equations | Trofimova Daria Yurievna, master student of the Russian State Pedagogical University named after. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 7 - 9 | Systems of non-linear equations. | Gavrilova Larisa Albertovna, secondary school 519, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 8 | Square roots | Chikrin Evgeny Aleksandrovich, Lyceum No. 83, Kazan |
Pass test | 8 | Quadratic Equations | Victoria Viktorovna Semenova, GBOU Lyceum No. 226, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 8 | Quadrangles | Osipova Alla Vladimirovna, GBOU Lyceum No. 373 "Economic Lyceum", St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 8 | Circle | Afanasyeva Valentina Nikolaevna, "Alsheevskaya secondary school", Tatarstan |
Pass test | 8 | Numerical inequalities and their properties | Sereda Svetlana Petrovna, Verkh-Chumanskaya school, Altai Territory |
Pass test | 8 | Relations between sides and angles of a right triangle | Tsybulskaya Tatyana Dmitrievna, GBOU secondary school No. 47, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 8 | Pythagorean theorem | Tsybulskaya Tatyana Dmitrievna, secondary school N 47, St. Petersburg. |
Pass test | 8 | Area | Batalova Oksana Vladimirovna, Singapai Secondary School, Singapai, Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug |
Pass test | 8 | Similar triangles | Ladygina Elena Arsenievna, secondary school No. 164, St. Petersburg. |
Pass test | 8 | Real number module | Grigoryeva Olga Vasilievna, Sudislavskaya secondary school of the Sudislavsky municipal district of the Kostroma region |
Pass test | 8 | Degree with integer exponent. The standard form of a number. | Mamonova Victoria Viktorovna, MBOU secondary school No. 6 n/a Shchukozero, Murmansk region |
Pass test | 8 | Area of polygons | Javadyan Ruzanna Rubenovna, master student of the Russian State Pedagogical University named after A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 8 | Vieta's theorem. | Nikolaeva Alina Dmitrievna, undergraduate of the Russian State Pedagogical University named after A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 8 | Linear inequalities. | Udalova Elena Mikhailovna, GBOU secondary school 579 St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 8 | Middle line of the triangle | Rukhlyadko Valentina Vasilievna, MBOU Trubchevskaya Gymnasium. M. T. Kalashnikova, Trubchevsk, Bryansk region |
Pass test | 8 | Module. Equations and inequalities with module | Irina Kazachenko, Kemerovo Presidential Cadet School, Kemerovo |
Pass test | 8 - 9 | Algebraic fractions | Ivanova Irina Leonidovna, School No. 149, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 8 - 9 | Square function | Shishorik Elena Sergeevna, MOU "Sertolovskaya secondary school No. 2", Leningrad region |
Pass test | 8 - 9 | Areas of quadrilaterals | Kovaleva Olga Alexandrovna, KSU Complex school - kindergarten No. 33 of the city of Karaganda Kazakhstan |
Pass test | 8 - 9 | Square roots | Nesterenko Galina Ivanovna, secondary school No. 603, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 8 - 9 | Square inequalities | Danilovich Tatyana Alexandrovna, secondary school No. 18, Apsheronsk |
Pass test | 8 - 9 | Polygons. | Ruslan Andreevich Sannikov, intern at the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 8 - 9 | Combinatorics | Boronina Anastasia, master student of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 8 - 9 | Vectors | Lyubimova Victoria Viktorovna, GBOU secondary school No. 454, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 8 - 11 | Central and inscribed corners | Tikhomirova Tatyana Borisovna, secondary school No. 277, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 8 - 11 | Calculation of areas of figures on checkered paper | Turanova Irina Nikolaevna, GBOU gymnasium No. 628, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 9 | Inequalities | Vorobyov Vasily Vasilyevich, lyceum of Kalachinsk, Omsk region |
Pass test | 9 | Geometric progression | Gritsenko David, School No. 147, Yerevan |
Pass test | 9 | Power properties with rational exponent | Karasyova Vera Vasilievna, MBOU "Secondary School No. 38", Cheboksary |
Pass test | 9 | Coordinate method | Melikhova Anna Gennadievna, school number 671, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 9 | Elements of the theory of probability | Lyubimova Victoria Sergeevna, GBOU School No. 454, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 9 | Area | Bukina Olesya Alekseevna, Meshalkina Olga Gennadievna, MBOU Lyceum No. 2, Barnaul |
Pass test | 9 | Figure areas | Popova Larisa Georgievna, gymnasium No. 17, Kemerovo |
Pass test | 9 | Dot Product of Vectors | Shelest Ekaterina Yulievna, Andreevskaya secondary school, Dnepropetrovsk region |
Pass test | 9 | Regular polygons | Yulia Viktorovna Prokofieva, school No. 326, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 9 | Power function | Novozhilova Marina Alekseevna, Nevsky College named after A. G. Nebolsin, St. Petersburg. |
Pass test | 9 | Algebraic Equations (Advanced) | Kuznetsova Natalya Viktorovna, Pervomaiskaya secondary school, Pervomaisky village, Voronezh region |
Pass test | 9 | Similar triangles | Kuznetsova Natalia Viktorovna, Pervomaiskaya secondary school, Pervomaisky village, Voronezh region |
Pass test | 9 | Vectors on a plane | Grishchenko Igor Mikhailovich, Regional Specialized Lyceum School for Gifted Children LORD, Petropavlovsk, Republic of Kazakhstan |
Pass test | 9 | Circumference and area of a circle | Pavlenko Olga Yurievna, St. Petersburg, secondary school at the Embassy of Russia in Romania |
Pass test | 9 | Solving triangles | Archibasova Elena Mikhailovna, Gymnasium No. 1, Novosibirsk |
Pass test | 9 | Arithmetic progression | Mikhaleva Elena Alexandrovna, gymnasium No. 13, Aleksin, Tula region |
Pass test | 9 | Brief review of the 9th grade mathematics course | Rogozhnikova Anna Ivanovna, MBOU Zainsk Secondary School No. 6 |
Pass test | 9 | Vectors. | Lys Anna Nikolaevna, secondary school No. 22, Kovrova |
Pass test | 9 | Vectors. Vector addition and subtraction | Dankova Valentina Nikolaevna, secondary school No. 2, Azov, Rostov Region |
Pass test | 9 | Planimetric angles. | Simonenko Yana Viktorovna, undergraduate of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 9 | Calculations and algebraic expressions | Naprushkina Elena Sergeevna, Secondary school No. 136, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 9 | Vectors | Leonidov Artyom Ivanovich, master student of the Russian State Pedagogical University named after. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 9 | Principles of Probability | Novik Dmitry Vadimovich, master student of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Hercena, St. Petersburg, teacher of mathematics, secondary school No. 594 |
Pass test | 9 | Probability Theory | Gakh Elena Viktorovna, teacher of mathematics, secondary school No. 136 of the Kalininsky district of St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 9 - 11 | Interest. Preparation for the OGE and USE | Bukina Olesya Alekseevna, Meshalkina Olga Gennadievna, MBOU Lyceum No. 2, Barnaul |
Pass test | 9 - 11 | Elements of combinatorics | Sudakova Anna Grigorievna, undergraduate of the Russian State Pedagogical University. A. I. Herzen, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 10 | Trigonometric equations | Martynova Tatyana Nikolaevna, State Educational Institution "Secondary School No. 2 of Bykhov" |
Pass test | 10 | Relations between trigonometric functions of the same angle | Martynova Tatyana Nikolaevna, State Educational Institution "Secondary School No. 2 of Bykhov" |
Pass test | 10 - 11 | Converting expressions containing trigonometric and inverse trigonometric functions | Voevodina Olga Anatolyevna, MAOU "Lyceum No. 62", Saratov |
Pass test | 10 - 11 | Method of coordinates in space. Part 1 | Budarina Anna Yuryevna, Volkova Victoria Alexandrovna, MBOU secondary school named after. A. M. Gorky, MBOU secondary school them. S. M. Kirov, Karachev, Bryansk region |
Pass test | 10 - 11 | Method of coordinates in space. Part 2 | Budarina Anna Yuryevna, Volkova Victoria Alexandrovna, MBOU secondary school named after. A. M. Gorky, MBOU secondary school them. S. M. Kirov, Karachev, Bryansk region |
Pass test | 10 - 11 | Logarithms. Properties of the logarithm. | Volchkova Tatyana Nikolaevna, MBOU Krasnopolyanskaya secondary school No. 32, p. Krasnaya Polyana, Rostov region |
Pass test | 10 - 11 | Solving inequalities by the interval method | Voznaya Oksana Anatolyevna, Urozhaynovskaya school, Simferopol region, Republic of Crimea |
Pass test | 10 - 11 | exponential equations. | Lyubimova Victoria Viktorovna, GBOU secondary school No. 454, St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 11 | Final test | Vikulina Elena Vladimirovna, College "Krasnoselsky", St. Petersburg |
Pass test | 11 | Logarithms and their properties | Voevodina Olga Anatolyevna, MAOU "Lyceum No. 62", Saratov |
Pass test | 11 | Study of logarithmic functions | Mikhaleva Elena Alexandrovna, gymnasium No. 13, Aleksin, Tula region |
Pass test | 11 | Differentiation of power and linear functions | Mironchuk Irina Stepanovna, GBOU secondary school No. 230, St. Petersburg |
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