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Expanding Brackets in Equations

Maths • Year 8 • 1 • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England

Maths
8Year 8
1
22 March 2025

Expanding Brackets in Equations

Lesson Overview

This is a two-lesson sequence designed for a Year 8, KS3 bottom set (26 students) focusing on solving equations that contain brackets. The lessons follow the ‘I Do, We Do, You Do’ strategy and include a high use of mini whiteboards to encourage active participation.

This lesson aligns with the UK National Curriculum for Mathematics:

  • Curriculum Area: Algebra (KS3)
  • Specific Objective: Solve linear equations including those with brackets.

Learning Objectives

By the end of these two lessons, students will:

  1. Apply the distributive property to expand brackets in equations.
  2. Solve linear equations that involve brackets.
  3. Check their solutions using substitution.

Success Criteria

  • Good if: You can expand brackets correctly in an equation.
  • Better if: You can solve equations that contain brackets and find the unknown.
  • Excellent if: You can solve equations with brackets, including those with negative terms, and justify your answer.

Lesson 1: Expanding Brackets

Starter (5 mins)

  • Activity: 'Mystery Numbers' on mini whiteboards — students are given equations with missing numbers inside brackets (e.g., ? (3) + 6 = 15). They must deduce the missing number.
  • Pedagogy: Engages students by triggering prior knowledge of multiplication and algebra. This also builds confidence before working with variables.

Teach Stage (10 mins) – 'I Do'

  • Introduce the process of expanding brackets using simple expressions (e.g., 3(x + 4)).

  • Model step by step:

    1. Distribute the 3: Write 3 × x + 3 × 4 = 3x + 12.
    2. Discuss common misconceptions (e.g., forgetting to multiply by both terms).
    3. Use different numbers to show consistency.
  • Questioning:

    • "Why do we multiply everything inside the bracket?"
    • "What happens if we have negative numbers inside the brackets?"
  • Use of Mini Whiteboards: Students copy teacher examples, helping with real-time assessment (AFL) and adjusting teaching based on responses.


Guided Practice (10 mins) – 'We Do'

  • Teach students how to expand further examples on mini whiteboards:
    • 4(x – 2)
    • -5(y + 3)
  • Differentiation:
    • EAL/SEN Support: Provide visual cues, colour coding, and guided worksheet with missing steps.
    • Challenge higher-ability students with expressions containing fractions (e.g., ½(6x – 4)).

Independent Practice (15 mins) – 'You Do'

  • Students complete worksheet tasks where equations gradually increase in difficulty.
  • Use think-pair-share for peer discussion on one problem to promote reasoning.
  • AFL check: Teacher circulates and annotates common mistakes on the board, discussing errors without naming students.

Confident End (5 mins)

  • Mini whiteboards quickfire true or false quiz:
    • "Expanding 3(x + 4) gives 3x + 4."
    • "Expanding -2(x – 5) gives -2x + 10."
  • Exit Ticket: Students solve one question individually to assess understanding before leaving.

Lesson 2: Solving Equations with Brackets

Starter (5 mins)

  • ‘Odd One Out’ challenge – Give students three similar-looking expanded expressions, one of which is incorrect (e.g., 2(x + 3) = 2x + 6, 3(x + 2) = 3x + 5, 4(x + 1) = 4x + 4).
  • Pedagogy: Encourages discussion and retrieval of previous learning before solving full equations.

Teach Stage (10 mins) – 'I Do'

  • Extend expanding brackets to solving equations:
    • Step 1: Expand the bracket (e.g., 2(x + 4) = 10 → 2x + 8 = 10).
    • Step 2: Solve for x (e.g., 2x = 2, x = 1).
  • Think Aloud: Verbalising reasoning to model clarity for lower-ability learners.
  • AFL checks: Cold calling and mini whiteboards.

Guided Practice (10 mins) – 'We Do'

  • Work through two examples as a class:
    • 5(y + 3) = 20
    • -3(a – 2) = 9
  • Scaffolding: Step-by-step guide for SEN and EAL learners with key vocab (e.g., 'Expand', 'Solve').
  • Higher-ability challenge: Equations where expansion and collecting like terms are needed (e.g., 3(x + 2) – x = 8).

Independent Practice (15 mins) – 'You Do'

  • Worksheet with differentiated problems:
    • L1: Basic expanding and solving.
    • L2: Equations with negatives.
    • L3: Multi-step equations.
  • Peer marking for teamwork, using pre-written model answers.

Confident End (5 mins)

  • Mini Whiteboard ‘Beat the Teacher’ Challenge: Students race against the teacher solving one equation at a time.
  • Exit ticket: Solve an equation without expansion shown to test fluency. Discuss misconceptions before leaving.

Assessment and Differentiation

  • Mini whiteboards for formative AFL throughout.
  • Sentence scaffolds and word banks for EAL learners.
  • Colour-coded guided sheets for SEN learners.

Reflection and Next Steps

  • If confident, students move to solving two-step linear equations with fractions.
  • If struggling, plan a small group reteach focusing on misconceptions.

Why This Works

🌟 Engaging: Games, challenges, and mini whiteboards create excitement.
🌟 Scaffolded Support: 'I Do, We Do, You Do' ensures every student builds confidence.
🌟 High AFL Use: Real-time mini whiteboard checks prevent misconceptions from embedding.

This lesson not only improves understanding but boosts student confidence in solving equations with brackets—making algebra accessible for all. 🚀

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