The Fibonacci Sequence

Patterns are everywhere we look. Fibonacci noticed them as early as the 13th Century. Can you recognize numerical patterns when looking at a series of numbers?



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Pam Lowe


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Created by Pam Lowe Using Home Sweet Home Page Graphics.2005. SDheaderblank4.gif. 2002


Curriculum Snapshot:
Topic:Patterns
Themes: Patterns in nature and man-made objects.
Curriculum Areas:Math
Grade Level(s):4
Missouri Content Standards
Mathematics (2004)
Grade 4
Strand II. Algebraic Relationships
MA-4.II.1. Understand patterns, relations and functions.
MA-4.II.1.A. describe geometric and numeric patterns.
MA-4.II.1.B. analyze patterns using words, tables and graphs.
MA-4.II.2. Represent and analyze mathematical situations and structures using algebraic symbols.
MA-4.II.2.A. represent a mathematical situation as an expression or number sentence.
MA-4.II.2.B. apply the commutative property of multiplication to whole numbers.
MA-4.II.3. Use mathematical models to represent and understand quantitative relationships.
MA-4.II.3.A. model problem situations, using representations such as graphs, tables or number sentences.
MA-4.II.4. Analyze change in various contexts.
MA-4.II.4.A. describe mathematical relationships in terms of constant rates of change.


Last updated: December 02 2004, 12:01 pm
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