Learn on PengienVision, Mathematics, Grade 6Chapter 3: Numeric and Algebraic Expressions

Lesson 4: Write Algebraic Expressions

In this Grade 6 enVision Mathematics lesson from Chapter 3, students learn how to write algebraic expressions using variables to represent real-world situations involving addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. Students also identify the parts of an expression, including terms, coefficients, and constants. The lesson covers translating word phrases into algebraic expressions and recognizing equivalent forms such as 4n, 4·n, and 4(n).

Section 1

Variables and Constants

Property

A variable is a letter that represents a number or quantity whose value may change.
A constant is a number whose value always stays the same.
In algebra, letters of the alphabet are used to represent variables. Letters often used for variables are xx, yy, aa, bb, and cc.

Examples

  • In the expression c+5c+5, cc is the variable because its value can change, and 55 is the constant because its value is fixed.
  • If a movie ticket costs 8 dollars, the number of tickets you buy is a variable (tt), but the price of each ticket is a constant (8 dollars).
  • Sarah is 5 years younger than her brother, Mark. If Mark's age is mm, Sarah's age is m5m-5. Here, mm is a variable and 55 is a constant.

Explanation

In algebra, we use letters (variables) for numbers that can change, like your height. Numbers that always stay the same, like the number of days in a week, are constants. This helps us write rules for changing situations.

Section 2

Writing Algebraic Expressions

Property

An algebraic expression is the same as an arithmetic expression, except that some of the entries are letters representing numbers.
An algebraic expression, or simply an expression, is any meaningful combination of numbers, variables, and operation symbols.

To write an algebraic expression:

  1. Identify the unknown quantity and write a short phrase to describe it.
  2. Choose a variable to represent the unknown quantity.
  3. Use mathematical symbols to represent the relationship.

Examples

  • The phrase "a number x increased by 12" translates to the expression x+12x + 12.
  • To represent "8 times the price p", you write the expression 8p8p.
  • "The total cost C split among 4 friends" is written as the expression C4\frac{C}{4}.

Section 3

Identifying Terms and Coefficients

Property

In an algebraic expression, terms are the parts separated by addition or subtraction signs. The coefficient is the numerical factor of a term that contains a variable. A term without a variable is called a constant.

Examples

Book overview

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Chapter 3: Numeric and Algebraic Expressions

  1. Lesson 1

    Lesson 1: Understand and Represent Exponents

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: Find Greatest Common Factor and Least Common Multiple

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Write and Evaluate Numerical Expressions

  4. Lesson 4Current

    Lesson 4: Write Algebraic Expressions

  5. Lesson 5

    Lesson 5: Evaluate Algebraic Expressions

  6. Lesson 6

    Lesson 6: Generate Equivalent Expressions

  7. Lesson 7

    Lesson 7: Simplify Algebraic Expressions

Lesson overview

Expand to review the lesson summary and core properties.

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Section 1

Variables and Constants

Property

A variable is a letter that represents a number or quantity whose value may change.
A constant is a number whose value always stays the same.
In algebra, letters of the alphabet are used to represent variables. Letters often used for variables are xx, yy, aa, bb, and cc.

Examples

  • In the expression c+5c+5, cc is the variable because its value can change, and 55 is the constant because its value is fixed.
  • If a movie ticket costs 8 dollars, the number of tickets you buy is a variable (tt), but the price of each ticket is a constant (8 dollars).
  • Sarah is 5 years younger than her brother, Mark. If Mark's age is mm, Sarah's age is m5m-5. Here, mm is a variable and 55 is a constant.

Explanation

In algebra, we use letters (variables) for numbers that can change, like your height. Numbers that always stay the same, like the number of days in a week, are constants. This helps us write rules for changing situations.

Section 2

Writing Algebraic Expressions

Property

An algebraic expression is the same as an arithmetic expression, except that some of the entries are letters representing numbers.
An algebraic expression, or simply an expression, is any meaningful combination of numbers, variables, and operation symbols.

To write an algebraic expression:

  1. Identify the unknown quantity and write a short phrase to describe it.
  2. Choose a variable to represent the unknown quantity.
  3. Use mathematical symbols to represent the relationship.

Examples

  • The phrase "a number x increased by 12" translates to the expression x+12x + 12.
  • To represent "8 times the price p", you write the expression 8p8p.
  • "The total cost C split among 4 friends" is written as the expression C4\frac{C}{4}.

Section 3

Identifying Terms and Coefficients

Property

In an algebraic expression, terms are the parts separated by addition or subtraction signs. The coefficient is the numerical factor of a term that contains a variable. A term without a variable is called a constant.

Examples

Book overview

Jump across lessons in the current chapter without opening the full course modal.

Continue this chapter

Chapter 3: Numeric and Algebraic Expressions

  1. Lesson 1

    Lesson 1: Understand and Represent Exponents

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: Find Greatest Common Factor and Least Common Multiple

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Write and Evaluate Numerical Expressions

  4. Lesson 4Current

    Lesson 4: Write Algebraic Expressions

  5. Lesson 5

    Lesson 5: Evaluate Algebraic Expressions

  6. Lesson 6

    Lesson 6: Generate Equivalent Expressions

  7. Lesson 7

    Lesson 7: Simplify Algebraic Expressions