• Mathematical process standards (1)
    • Apply mathematics to problems arising in everyday life, society, and the workplace.

    • Use a problem-solving model that incorporates analyzing given information, formulating a plan or strategy, determining a solution, justifying the solution, and evaluating the problem-solving process and the reasonableness of the solution.

    • Select tools, including real objects, manipulatives, paper and pencil, and technology as appropriate, and techniques, including mental math, estimation, and number sense as appropriate, to solve problems.

    • Communicate mathematical ideas, reasoning, and their implications using multiple representations, including symbols, diagrams, graphs, and language as appropriate.

    • Create and use representations to organize, record, and communicate mathematical ideas.

    • Analyze mathematical relationships to connect and communicate mathematical ideas.

    • Display, explain, and justify mathematical ideas and arguments using precise mathematical language in written or oral communication.

  • Number and operations (2)
    • Extend previous knowledge of sets and subsets using a visual representation to describe relationships between sets of real numbers.

    • Approximate the value of an irrational number, including π and square roots of numbers less than 225, and locate that rational number approximation on a number line.

    • Convert between standard decimal notation and scientific notation.

    • Order a set of real numbers arising from mathematical and real-world contexts.

  • Proportionality (3)
    • Generalize that the ratio of corresponding sides of similar shapes are proportional, including a shape and its dilation.

    • Compare and contrast the attributes of a shape and its dilation(s) on a coordinate plane.

    • Use an algebraic representation to explain the effect of a given positive rational scale factor applied to two-dimensional figures on a coordinate plane with the origin as the center of dilation.

  • Proportionality (4)
    • Use similar right triangles to develop an understanding that slope, m, given as the rate comparing the change in y-values to the change in x-values, (y2 - y1)/ (x2 - x1), is the same for any two points (x1, y1) and (x2, y2) on the same line.

    • Graph proportional relationships, interpreting the unit rate as the slope of the line that models the relationship.

    • Use data from a table or graph to determine the rate of change or slope and y-intercept in mathematical and real-world problems.

  • Proportionality (5)
    • Represent linear proportional situations with tables, graphs, and equations in the form of $y = kx$.

    • Represent linear non-proportional situations with tables, graphs, and equations in the form of $y = mx + b$, where $b \neq 0$.

    • Contrast bivariate sets of data that suggest a linear relationship with bivariate sets of data that do not suggest a linear relationship from a graphical representation.

    • Use a trend line that approximates the linear relationship between bivariate sets of data to make predictions.

    • Solve problems involving direct variation.

    • Distinguish between proportional and non-proportional situations using tables, graphs, and equations in the form $y = kx$ or $y = mx + b$, where $b \neq 0$.

    • Identify functions using sets of ordered pairs, tables, mappings, and graphs.

    • Identify examples of proportional and non-proportional functions that arise from mathematical and real-world problems.

    • Write an equation in the form $y = mx + b$ to model a linear relationship between two quantities using verbal, numerical, tabular, and graphical representations.

  • Expressions, equations, and relationships (6)
    • Describe the volume formula $V = Bh$ of a cylinder in terms of its base area and its height.

    • Model the relationship between the volume of a cylinder and a cone having both congruent bases and heights and connect that relationship to the formulas.

    • Use models and diagrams to explain the Pythagorean theorem.

  • Expressions, equations, and relationships (7)
    • Solve problems involving the volume of cylinders, cones, and spheres.

    • Use previous knowledge of surface area to make connections to the formulas for lateral and total surface area and determine solutions for problems involving rectangular prisms, triangular prisms, and cylinders.

    • Use the Pythagorean Theorem and its converse to solve problems.

    • Determine the distance between two points on a coordinate plane using the Pythagorean Theorem.

  • Expressions, equations, and relationships (8)
    • Write one-variable equations or inequalities with variables on both sides that represent problems using rational number coefficients and constants.

    • Write a corresponding real-world problem when given a one-variable equation or inequality with variables on both sides of the equal sign using rational number coefficients and constants.

    • Model and solve one-variable equations with variables on both sides of the equal sign that represent mathematical and real-world problems using rational number coefficients and constants.

    • Use informal arguments to establish facts about the angle sum and exterior angle of triangles, the angles created when parallel lines are cut by a transversal, and the angle-angle criterion for similarity of triangles.

  • Expressions, equations, and relationships (9)
    • Identify and verify the values of x and y that simultaneously satisfy two linear equations in the form $y = mx + b$ from the intersections of the graphed equations.

  • Two-dimensional shapes (10)
    • Generalize the properties of orientation and congruence of rotations, reflections, translations, and dilations of two-dimensional shapes on a coordinate plane.

    • Differentiate between transformations that preserve congruence and those that do not.

    • Explain the effect of translations, reflections over the x-or y-axis, and rotations limited to 90°, 180°, 270°, and 360° as applied to two-dimensional shapes on a coordinate plane using an algebraic representation.

    • Model the effect on linear and area measurements of dilated two-dimensional shapes.

  • Measurement and data (11)
    • Construct a scatterplot and describe the observed data to address questions of association such as linear, non-linear, and no association between bivariate data.

    • Determine the mean absolute deviation and use this quantity as a measure of the average distance data are from the mean using a data set of no more than 10 data points.

    • Simulate generating random samples of the same size from a population with known characteristics to develop the notion of a random sample being representative of the population from which it was selected.

  • Personal financial literacy (12)
    • Solve real-world problems comparing how interest rate and loan length affect the cost of credit.

    • Calculate the total cost of repaying a loan, including credit cards and easy access loans, under various rates of interest and over different periods using an online calculator.

    • Explain how small amounts of money invested regularly, including money saved for college and retirement, grow over time.

    • Calculate and compare simple interest and compound interest earnings.

    • Identify and explain the advantages and disadvantages of different payment methods.

    • Analyze situations to determine if they represent financially responsible decisions and identify the benefits of financial responsibility and the costs of financial irresponsibility.

    • Estimate the cost of a two-year and four-year college education, including family contribution, and devise a periodic savings plan for accumulating the money needed to contribute to the total cost of attendance for at least the first year of college.