Exponents and very large numbers
Students work with exponent rules and scientific notation, the shorthand scientists use for numbers like the distance to the sun or the size of a cell. They also meet square roots and cube roots.
This is the year math shifts from arithmetic to algebra. Students work with lines as equations, learning that a straight graph has a slope and a starting point, and they solve for unknowns when two lines meet. They also meet the Pythagorean theorem and use it to find missing sides of right triangles. By spring, students can graph a line from an equation like y = 2x + 3 and explain what the slope means in a real situation.
Students work with exponent rules and scientific notation, the shorthand scientists use for numbers like the distance to the sun or the size of a cell. They also meet square roots and cube roots.
Students solve equations with a single unknown, including ones that need a few steps of cleanup first. They also learn that some equations have one answer, some have none, and some have infinitely many.
Students learn what slope means and how to read a line from a graph, a table, or an equation. They are introduced to functions, the idea that one input gives exactly one output.
Students work with two equations at once and find the point where the lines cross. They solve these by graphing, by table, and by algebra, and use them in problems like comparing two phone plans.
Students slide, flip, turn, and resize figures on a grid. They learn what makes two shapes congruent or similar, and use similar triangles to make sense of slope.
Students use the Pythagorean theorem to find missing sides of right triangles and distances between two points on a grid. They also calculate the volume of cones, cylinders, and spheres.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Integer exponent rules | Students learn the rules for multiplying, dividing, and raising powers so they can rewrite expressions like 3 to the fourth divided by 3 squared as a single, simpler number. The focus is on whole-number and negative exponents. | NY-8.EE.1 |
| Square roots and cube roots | Students solve equations by finding square roots and cube roots. They memorize square roots up to 225 and cube roots up to 125, and recognize that the square root of a number like 2 or 3 never resolves to a clean fraction. | NY-8.EE.2 |
| Scientific notation for big and small numbers | Scientific notation shrinks huge or tiny numbers into a simpler form, like 3 x 10⁵ instead of 300,000. Students use that shorthand to compare two numbers and say how many times bigger one is than the other. | NY-8.EE.3 |
| Multiply and divide in scientific notation | Numbers in scientific notation use powers of 10 to shrink very large or very small values into a compact form. Students multiply and divide those numbers, convert between scientific and standard notation, and read scientific notation outputs from calculators. | NY-8.EE.4 |
| Slope and proportional relationships | Students graph proportional relationships and find the slope, which is just the unit rate shown as a line's steepness. They also compare two proportional relationships even when one is shown as a graph and the other as a table or equation. | NY-8.EE.5 |
| Slope and the equation of a line | Two triangles with the same angles but different sizes always produce the same ratio of rise to run. Students use that fact to show why slope stays constant on a straight line, then build the equations y = mx and y = mx + b from scratch. | NY-8.EE.6 |
| Solving linear equations with one variable | Students solve equations with one unknown, such as 3x + 5 = 20, and figure out whether there is one answer, no answer, or endless answers. They work through fractions, parentheses, and like terms to get there. | NY-8.EE.7 |
| Solving systems of two linear equations | Two straight lines drawn on a graph either cross once, run parallel and never meet, or sit on top of each other. Students find the point where both equations are true at the same time, using graphs, tables, or algebra. | NY-8.EE.8 |
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| One input, one output: functions | A function is a rule where every input has exactly one output. Students read graphs as collections of input-output pairs and check whether a relationship qualifies as a function. | NY-8.F.1 |
| Comparing functions shown different ways | Two functions can be shown in different ways: as an equation, a graph, a table, or a description. Students compare them to find which grows faster, starts higher, or behaves differently. | NY-8.F.2 |
| Linear vs. non-linear functions | Students learn that the equation y = mx + b always makes a straight line on a graph, and that not every function works that way. They practice spotting which relationships are linear and which curve or bend. | NY-8.F.3 |
| Building linear functions from tables and graphs | Students find the starting value and steady rate of change in a linear relationship, then use both to write an equation that models the pattern from a table, graph, or word description. | NY-8.F.4 |
| Reading and sketching graphs from real life | Students read a line graph and describe in words what's happening between two quantities, like speed and time. They also sketch a rough graph to match a real-world description, showing where values rise, fall, or level off. | NY-8.F.5 |
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| How shapes move without changing | Students test what happens to shapes when they slide, flip, or spin them. Lines stay the same length, angles keep their measure, and parallel lines stay parallel after every move. | NY-8.G.1 |
| Matching congruent shapes on a coordinate plane | Two shapes are congruent when they are exactly the same size and shape. Students identify whether two shapes on a grid are congruent and describe the flips, slides, or turns that move one shape onto the other. | NY-8.G.2 |
| Moving shapes with coordinates | Students learn how sliding, spinning, flipping, or resizing a shape changes the coordinates of its points on a grid. They describe exactly what happens to each corner of the shape after the move. | NY-8.G.3 |
| Similar figures and similarity transformations | Two shapes are similar when they match in angles but one is a scaled-up or scaled-down version of the other. Students identify that relationship and describe the flips, slides, turns, or resizes that would move one shape exactly onto the other on a coordinate grid. | NY-8.G.4 |
| Proof of the Pythagorean Theorem | Students learn why the Pythagorean Theorem works, not just how to use it. They follow a logical proof showing why the three sides of a right triangle relate the way they do, and work through the reasoning in reverse to confirm whether a triangle is a right triangle. | NY-8.G.6 |
| Finding missing sides with the Pythagorean Theorem | Given two sides of a right triangle, students find the missing side using the Pythagorean Theorem. This applies to flat shapes on paper and to real objects like ramps, boxes, and rooms. | NY-8.G.7 |
| Distance between two points on a graph | Students use the Pythagorean Theorem to find the straight-line distance between two points on a grid. They treat the horizontal and vertical gap between the points as the two legs of a right triangle, then solve for the hypotenuse. | NY-8.G.8 |
| Volume of cones, cylinders, and spheres | Students use the volume formulas for cones, cylinders, and spheres to solve problems. Given the formula, they plug in the measurements and find how much space a shape holds. | NY-8.G.9 |
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Decimals, rational numbers, and irrational numbers | Every number can be written as a decimal. Fractions turn into decimals that repeat or end (like 0.333... or 0.25), while irrational numbers, such as pi, produce decimals that go on forever without any repeating pattern. | NY-8.NS.1 |
| Placing irrational numbers on a number line | Students find close decimal estimates for numbers like the square root of 2 or pi, then place those estimates on a number line and use them to compare or calculate. The exact value isn't needed, just a useful approximation. | NY-8.NS.2 |
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Scatter plots and what they reveal | Students plot two sets of real measurements on a graph to see how they relate. They look for patterns: do the points cluster together, does one value rise as the other does, and do any points sit far outside the group? | NY-8.SP.1 |
| Fitting a line to scatter plot data | Students look at a scatter plot and decide whether the dots follow a roughly straight path. If they do, students sketch a line through the middle of the data and judge how well that line matches the pattern. | NY-8.SP.2 |
| Reading slope and intercept in real data | Students use the equation of a best-fit line to answer real questions, like how much a plant grows per week. They explain what the slope and starting value mean in plain terms tied to the data. | NY-8.SP.3 |
All New York public school students take this math test in the spring of grade 8. Eighth graders enrolled in Regents Algebra I take that course's Regents exam instead and skip the grade 8 math test.
The end-of-course exam students take after completing Algebra I. Students must pass this exam (or a state-approved equivalent in mathematics) to earn a Regents diploma.
The alternate state test for students with the most significant cognitive disabilities. NYSAA replaces the Grade 3-8 tests and Regents exams in ELA, math, and science for the small group of students whose IEP teams qualify them.
Most of the year centers on lines and linear equations. Students learn what a function is, graph lines, find the slope, solve equations with variables on both sides, and work with pairs of equations at once. They also meet the Pythagorean Theorem and square roots.
Ask students to explain their steps out loud when solving an equation. If they get stuck, have them sketch a quick graph or make a small table of values. Real situations help too, like figuring out a phone plan cost or how far a ladder reaches up a wall.
A function is a rule where each input gives one output. Think of a vending machine: press B4 and you always get the same snack. Students spend the year comparing functions shown as equations, graphs, tables, and word problems, so getting comfortable with this idea early pays off.
Build slope from proportional relationships and similar triangles before jumping to y = mx + b. Once students see slope as a constant rate between any two points on a line, the intercept becomes the starting value. Then linear equations, systems, and scatter plots all rest on the same foundation.
It is the rule that says, in a right triangle, the two shorter sides squared add up to the longest side squared. Students use it to find missing side lengths, measure distance between two points on a graph, and solve real problems like the diagonal of a TV screen.
Negative exponents, the difference between no solution and infinitely many solutions, and interpreting slope in context tend to need extra passes. Scientific notation also slips if it is not revisited after the unit ends. Build short spiral reviews into warm-ups across the year.
Yes. Fluency with fractions, decimals, negative numbers, and percents shows up in almost every problem. Five minutes of mental math a few times a week, especially with fractions and signed numbers, prevents small errors from hiding what students actually understand.
By spring, students should solve multi-step linear equations and systems without prompting, write a linear function from a table or graph, and use the Pythagorean Theorem in two and three dimensions. They should also read a scatter plot, fit a line, and explain what the slope means in context.
It is a shorthand for very large or very small numbers, like writing the distance to the sun as 9.3 times 10 to the 7th miles. Students will see it in science class and on calculators. Pointing it out when it pops up on a screen helps it feel normal.