Bridging for Math Strengths Logo

Formative Assessment and Bridging activities

Grade 6


These materials were co-designed by teachers, coaches and math teacher educators and are part of an iterative design process. We continue refine and enhance the resources for teachers. Feedback is welcome and accepted at the link below.   
Share Feedback for Grade 6 Modules

As the new VDOE Links are updated on our website, please visit

Note: Links marked with   will open in a new tab

*These standards are bridging standards. Standards are considered a bridge when they: function as a bridge to which other content within the grade level/course is connected; serve as prerequisite knowledge for content to be addressed in future grade levels/courses; or possess endurance beyond a single unit of instruction within a grade level/course. 

Standard 6.1

Standard 6.1 Represent relationship between quantities using ratio, and use appropriate notations such as a/b, a to b, and a:b. 

(Pull down for more) 

Understanding the Learning Trajectory

.

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look Fors:

Purposeful Questions: 

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can recognize part to whole relationships and use fractions to represent part to whole relationships.

Bridging Concepts

Students can find equivalencies for part to whole relationships.

Standard 6.1

Students can represent relationships between quantities using ratio, and use appropriate notations such as “a to b” a:b and a/b.

Full Module with Instructional Tips & Resources:

Formative Assessments:  

Routines: 

Rich Tasks: 

Games/Tech: 

Back to top  

Standard 6.2a

Standard 6.2a Represent and determine equivalencies among fractions, mixed numbers, decimals, and percents 

(Pull down for more) 

Understanding the Learning Trajectory

.

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look Fors:

Purposeful Questions: 

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can represent and identify equivalencies among fractions and decimals, with and without models.

Bridging Concepts

Students can understand equivalent relationships and represent and identify equivalencies among fractions and decimals without models.

Standard 6.2a

Students can represent and determine equivalencies among fractions, mixed numbers, decimals, and percents.

Standard 6.2b

Standard 6.2b- Compare and order postive rational numbers

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look Fors:

Purposeful Questions: 

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can compare and order fractions and/or decimals in a given set using models or a computational strategy.



Bridging Concepts

Students can use multiple strategies to compare and order fractions, mixed numbers, and decimals.

Standard 6.2b

Students can compare and order positive rational numbers.


Full Module with Instructional Tips & Resources: 


Formative Assessments:  


Routines: 


Rich Tasks:  


Games/Tech: 


Back to top  

Standard 6.3a

Standard 6.3a Identify and represent integers.

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look Fors:

Purposeful Questions: 

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can create and solve single-step and multistep practical problems involving addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division of whole numbers.



Bridging Concepts

Students can understand values on a number line and modeling with different manipulatives.

Standard 6.3a

Students can identify and represent integers.


Full Module with Instructional Tips & Resources: 


Formative Assessments:  


Routines: 


Rich Tasks:  


Games/Tech: 


Back to top  

Standard 6.3b

Standard 6.3b Compare and order integers.

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths


Students can model integers, correctly label a number line, and understand mathematical symbols and use them correctly. 

Bridging Concepts

Students can compare and order integers in ascending or descending order and identify integers represented by a point on a number line.

Standard 6.3b

Students can compare and order integers with a number line; and compare integers using mathematical symbols.

Standard 6.3c

Standard 6.3c Identify and describe absolute value of integers.

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can identify and represent integers.
Students can order and compare integers.

Bridging Concepts

Students understand that opposite integers are an equal distance from zero.

Standard 6.3c

Students can identify and describe absolute value of integers.

Standard 6.4

Standard 6.4 Recognize and represent patterns with whole number exponents and perfect squares.

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students use an array model for multiplication.
Students can determine numerical patterns in a table using addition/subtraction.

Bridging Concepts

Students can determine numerical patterns in a table using multiplication/division.
Students have whole number multiplication fact fluency.

Standard 6.4

Students can recognize and represent patterns with whole number exponents and perfect squares.

Standard 6.5a

Standard 6.5a Multiply and divide fractions and mixed numbers.

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can solve single step practical problems involving multiplication of a whole number limited to twelve or less and a proper fraction with models.

Bridging Concepts

Students can simplify fractions, understand how to change mixed fractions to improper fractions and vice versa, and multiply a whole number by a fraction.

Standard 6.5a

Students can multiply and divide fractions and mixed numbers.

Standard 6.5B

Standard 6.5b Solve single-step and multistep practical problems involving addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division of fractions.

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can solve single step problems and add and subtract fractions.

Bridging Concepts

Students can multiply a whole number and a proper fraction. Students can solve multistep problems using whole numbers and/or fractions.

Standard 6.5b

Students can solve single-step and multistep practical problems involving addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division of fractions.

Standard 6.5C

Standard 6.5c Solve multistep practical problems involving addition, subtraction, multiplication and division of decimals.

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths


Students can create and solve single-step and multistep practical problems involving addition, subtraction of decimals.

Bridging Concepts

Students can solve multistep practical problems with multiplication of decimals and single-step practical problems involving division of decimals.

Standard 6.5c

Students can solve multistep practical problems involving addition, subtraction, multiplication and division of decimals.

Standard 6.6a

Standard 6.6a Add, subtract, multiply, and divide integers

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can add, subtract, multiply, and divide whole numbers fluently.Students can represent integers on a number line, as well as compare and order integers with and without number lines.

Bridging Concepts

Students can add, subtract, multiply and divide integers using concrete models.

Standard 6.6a

Students can add, subtract, multiply, and divide integers.

Standard 6.6b

Standard 6.6b Solve practical problems involving operations with integers

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can solve single step practical problems using whole numbers and plot integers on a number line.

Bridging Concepts

Students can add, subtract, multiply, and divide integers and can recognize vocabulary related to positive or negative change..

Standard 6.6b

Students can solve practical problems involving operations with integers.

Standard 6.6c

Standard 6.6c Simplify numerical expressions involving integers.

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can perform operations with whole numbers.
Students can simplify expressions using order of operations without exponents.

Bridging Concepts

Students can perform operations using integers.
Students understand that absolute value is the distance from zero.
Students understand that an exponent is repeated multiplication

Standard 6.6c

Students can simplify numerical expressions involving integers.

Standard 6.7ab

Standard 6.7ab The student will:

a) derive π (pi);

b) solve problems, including practical problems, involving circumference and area of a circle;

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can find the area of triangles and rectangles.

Bridging Concepts

Students understand the relationship between the radius and the diameter.
Students understand that the circumference is approximately 3 times the diameter.

Standard 6.7ab

Students can a) derive π (pi);b) solve problems, including practical problems, involving circumference and area of a circle;

Full Module with Instructional Tips & Resources: 


Formative Assessments:  


Routines: 


Rich Tasks:  


Games/Tech: 


Back to top  

Standard 6.7c

Standard 6.7c Solve problems, including practical problems, involving area and perimeter of triangles and rectangles.

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can find area and perimeter of rectangles using models.
Students can find the perimeter of triangles.

Bridging Concepts

Students understand and can apply the formulas for finding the area of rectangles and triangles.
Students understand when to find area and when to find perimeter

Standard 6.7c

Students can solve problems, including practical problems, involving area and perimeter of triangles and rectangles.

Standard 6.8a

Standard 6.8a Identify the components of the coordinate plane

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can identify congruent figures and recognize parallel, perpendicular, and intersecting lines.

Bridging Concepts

Students can identify positive and negative numbers on a horizontal and vertical number line.  

Standard 6.8a

Students can identify the components of the coordinate plane.

Standard 6.8b

Standard 6.8b Identify the coordinates of a point and graph ordered pairs in a coordinate plane 

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can identify components of the coordinate plane, find the area and perimeter of a rectangle or triangle, and identify congruent figures.

Bridging Concepts

Students can identify integers on a horizontal and vertical number line. 

Standard 6.8b

Students can identify points in the coordinate plane and graph ordered pairs in the coordinate plane.

Full Module with Instructional Tips & Resources: 


Formative Assessments:  

Routines: 


Rich Tasks:  


Games/Tech: 


Back to top  

Standard 6.9

Standard 6.9 Determine congruence of segments, angles, and polygons.  

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can describe polygons by their characteristics.
Students understand that a line of symmetry divides a polygon into two identical parts.

Bridging Concepts

Students understand that congruent figures have the same size and same shape regardless of orientation.
Students understand that all sides and interior angles are congruent in a regular polygon.

Standard 6.9

Students can determine congruence of segments, angles, and polygons.

Standard 6.10ac

Standard 6.10ac The student will:

a) represent data in a circle graph;

c) compare circle graphs with the same data represented in bar graphs, pictographs, and line plots.

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can represent and interpret data in bar graphs, pictographs, and line plots.

Bridging Concepts

Students can determine fractions/percentages of numbers.
Students can make comparisons between a variety of data representations.

Standard 6.10ac

Students can a) represent data in a circle graph;c) compare circle graphs with the same data represented in bar graphs, pictographs, and line plots.

Full Module with Instructional Tips & Resources: 


Formative Assessments:  

Routines: 


Rich Tasks:  


Games/Tech: 


Back to top  

Standard 6.10b

Standard 6.10b Make observations and inferences about data represented in a circle graph  

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can interpret data represented in line plots and stem-and-leaf plots.

Bridging Concepts

Students can find a percent or fraction of a whole number.

Standard 6.10b

Students can make observations and inferences about data represented in a circle graph.

Standard 6.11a

Standard 6.11a Represent the mean of a data set graphically as the balance point

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can describe mean, median, mode as measures of central  tendency and describe mean as a fair share.

Bridging Concepts

Students can determine the mean, median, mode and range for a set of data.

Standard 6.11a

Students can represent the mean of a set of data graphically as a balance point.

Standard 6.11b

Standard 6.11b Determine the effect on measures of center when a single value of a data set is added, removed, or changed 

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can describe mean, median, mode as measures of central tendency. Students can describe the mean as a fair share.

Bridging Concepts

Students can determine the mean, median, mode and range for a set of data.

Standard 6.11b

Students can determine the effect on measures of center when a value is added, removed or changed in a data set.

Standard 6.12a

Standard 6.12a Represent a proportional relationship between two quantities, including those that arise from practical situations 

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can represent relationships using ratios.

Bridging Concepts

Students can recognize equivalences between fractions, decimals, and percents. Students can recognize and express equivalent ratios.

Standard 6.12a

Students can represent a proportional relationship between two quantities, including those that arise from practical situations.

Standard 6.12b

Standard 6.12b Determine the unit rate of a proportional relationship and use it to find a missing value in a ratio table  

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can multiply and divide fluently.

Bridging Concepts

Students can recognize relationships that are proportional and determine equivalent ratios.

Standard 6.12b

Students can determine the unit rate of a proportional relationship and use it to find a missing value in a ratio table.

Standard 6.12c

Standard 6.12c Determine whether a proportional relationship exists between two quantities

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can multiply and divide fluently.

Bridging Concepts

Students can determine equivalent ratios. Students can find a unit rate in a given proportional situation.

Standard 6.12c

Students can determine whether a proportional relationship exists between two quantities.

Standard 6.12d

Standard 6.12d Make connections between and among representations of a proportional relationship between two quantities using verbal descriptions, ratio tables, and graphs   

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can multiply and divide fluently, find a unit rate, and find equivalent ratios.

Bridging Concepts

Students can determine if a situation is proportional or nonproportional. Students can represent proportional relationships in a variety of ways (pictures, tables, etc).

Standard 6.12d

Students can make connections between and among representations of a proportional relationship between two quantities using verbal descriptions, ratio tables, and graphs..

Standard 6.13

Standard 6.13 Solve one-step linear equations in one variable, including practical problems that require the solution of a one-step linear equation in one variable

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can solve single-step and multi-step practical problems involving whole numbers.

Bridging Concepts

Students can write an expression with a variable from a verbal expression involving one operation.

Standard 6.13

Students can solve one-step linear problems and one-step practical problems.

Standard 6.14a

Standard 6.14a Represent a practical situation with a linear inequality in one variable 

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can understand the concept of a variable as a representation of an unknown.

Bridging Concepts

Students can identify and use the  appropriate symbol to distinguish between expressions that are equal  and expressions that are not equal.

Standard 6.14a

Students can represent a practical situation with a single variable linear inequality.

Standard 6.14b

Standard 6.14b Solve one-step linear inequalities in one variable, involving addition or subtraction, and graph the solution on a number line  

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions:

Bridging for Math Strength Logo

Student Strengths

Students can identify and use the  appropriate symbol to distinguish between expressions that are equal  and expressions that are not equal.

Bridging Concepts

Students can use an expression with a variable as a representation of a  verbal expression involving one operation.

Standard 6.14b

Students can solve one-step linear inequalities, involving addition or subtraction, and graph the solution on  a number line.

Standard 6.5a Multiply and divide fractions and mixed numbers.

(Pull down for more)

Understanding the Learning Progression

Big Ideas:

Important Assessment Look-fors: 


Purposeful questions: