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Make Factoring Expressions Stick for Your Students

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Make Factoring Expressions Stick for Your Students

If factoring expressions ever felt like one of those math skills your students just don’t get right away, you’re not alone. With the right approach, this topic doesn’t have to be confusing for you or your students. In this post, I’m walking you through a step-by-step video that lays the groundwork with a quick distributive property review, then moves into factoring using the greatest common factor and ladder method. I’ll also share a classroom resource that makes practice meaningful and easy to implement. Let’s dive into a way of teaching factoring expressions that’s clear, supportive, and ready to use.

Watch the Video for Step-by-Step Help for Teaching Factoring Expressions

In this quick YouTube tutorial, we focus on how to help your students make sense of factoring expressions. It begins with a reminder of the distributive property and how factoring is really just the reverse process. Then, we dive into several examples that show how to pull out the greatest common factor and use the ladder method to factor.

Throughout the video, you’ll see how the math builds in complexity, from basic numerical expressions to ones that include variables. You’ll learn how to explain the why behind each step so your students don’t just follow a process. They will understand it. This video is a great resource to boost your confidence as a teacher and give your students clear, structured examples during whole group or small group instruction.

A Tip for Teaching Factoring Expressions

One thing I’ve found really helpful is emphasizing that there’s more than one right way to factor as long as students are pulling out a common factor correctly. Sometimes, they’ll factor by a number that isn’t the greatest common factor. That’s okay at first! It still works. It just may not be fully simplified. Allowing your students to recognize and compare methods helps them internalize the importance of the GCF while also boosting their confidence.

Letting your students recognize that and compare versions helps them internalize the importance of the GCF while also boosting their confidence.

Also, the ladder method introduced in the video is a game-changer. It’s a student-friendly way to find the GCF, especially as numbers get bigger. I recommend teaching it early and often. It’ll come in handy beyond just factoring expressions.

A Helpful Resource for Practicing Factoring Expressions

To go along with the video, I’ve created a classroom-ready lesson that walks your students through factoring expressions using both visual support and gradual release. The resource includes teacher notes to guide your lesson, guided notes, and a practice page where your students apply what they’ve learned.

There’s also an exit ticket to check for understanding, which is perfect for quick data collection or small group planning. This kind of structured approach ensures you’re not just telling your students how to factor. You’re helping them reason through the process, one step at a time.

You can use this Factoring & Distributive Property lesson for whole group instruction, targeted intervention, or even independent practice if your students are ready for it. It’s a solid addition to your unit on expressions or any review leading into equations.

Save for Later

Don’t lose track of this helpful lesson on factoring expressions! Pin this post to your math board so you can come back when you’re ready to teach or review factoring. Clear visuals, structured steps, and flexible resources. That’s everything you need to make this concept stick!

Ellie

Welcome to Cognitive Cardio Math! I’m Ellie, a wife, mom, grandma, and dog ‘mom,’ and I’ve spent just about my whole life in school! With nearly 30 years in education, I’ve taught:

  • All subject areas in 4th and 5th grades
  • Math, ELA, and science in 6th grade (middle school)

I’ve been creating resources for teachers since 2012 and have worked in the elearning industry for about five years as well!

If you’re looking for ideas and resources to help you teach math (and a little ELA), I can help you out!

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