Standard set
High School — Number and Quantity
Standards
Showing 54 of 54 standards.
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Standards for Mathematical Practice
Domain
Domain
The Real Number System
Domain
Domain
Quantities
Domain
Domain
The Complex Number System
Domain
Domain
Vector and Matrix Quantities
CCSS.Math.Practice.MP1
Standard
Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them.
CCSS.Math.Practice.MP2
Standard
Reason abstractly and quantitatively.
CCSS.Math.Practice.MP3
Standard
Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others.
CCSS.Math.Practice.MP4
Standard
Model with mathematics.
CCSS.Math.Practice.MP5
Standard
Use appropriate tools strategically.
CCSS.Math.Practice.MP6
Standard
Attend to precision.
CCSS.Math.Practice.MP7
Standard
Look for and make use of structure.
CCSS.Math.Practice.MP8
Standard
Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-RN.A
Cluster
Extend the properties of exponents to rational exponents.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-RN.B
Cluster
Use properties of rational and irrational numbers.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-Q.A
Cluster
Reason quantitatively and use units to solve problems.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-CN.A
Cluster
Perform arithmetic operations with complex numbers.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-CN.B
Cluster
Represent complex numbers and their operations on the complex plane.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-CN.C
Cluster
Use complex numbers in polynomial identities and equations.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.A
Cluster
Represent and model with vector quantities.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.B
Cluster
Perform operations on vectors.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.C
Cluster
Perform operations on matrices and use matrices in applications.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-RN.A.1
Standard
Explain how the definition of the meaning of rational exponents follows from extending the properties of integer exponents to those values, allowing for a notation for radicals in terms of rational exponents.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-RN.A.2
Standard
Rewrite expressions involving radicals and rational exponents using the properties of exponents.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-RN.B.3
Standard
Explain why the sum or product of two rational numbers is rational; that the sum of a rational number and an irrational number is irrational; and that the product of a nonzero rational number and an irrational number is irrational.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-Q.A.1
Standard
Use units as a way to understand problems and to guide the solution of multi-step problems; choose and interpret units consistently in formulas; choose and interpret the scale and the origin in graphs and data displays.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-Q.A.2
Standard
Define appropriate quantities for the purpose of descriptive modeling.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-Q.A.3
Standard
Choose a level of accuracy appropriate to limitations on measurement when reporting quantities.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-CN.A.1
Standard
Know there is a complex number i such that i² = -1, and every complex number has the form a + bi with a and b real.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-CN.A.2
Standard
Use the relation i² = -1 and the commutative, associative, and distributive properties to add, subtract, and multiply complex numbers.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-CN.A.3
Standard
(+) Find the conjugate of a complex number; use conjugates to find moduli and quotients of complex numbers.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-CN.B.4
Standard
(+) Represent complex numbers on the complex plane in rectangular and polar form (including real and imaginary numbers), and explain why the rectangular and polar forms of a given complex number represent the same number.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-CN.B.5
Standard
(+) Represent addition, subtraction, multiplication, and conjugation of complex numbers geometrically on the complex plane; use properties of this representation for computation.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-CN.B.6
Standard
(+) Calculate the distance between numbers in the complex plane as the modulus of the difference, and the midpoint of a segment as the average of the numbers at its endpoints.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-CN.C.7
Standard
Solve quadratic equations with real coefficients that have complex solutions.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-CN.C.8
Standard
(+) Extend polynomial identities to the complex numbers.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-CN.C.9
Standard
(+) Know the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra; show that it is true for quadratic polynomials.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.A.1
Standard
(+) Recognize vector quantities as having both magnitude and direction. Represent vector quantities by directed line segments, and use appropriate symbols for vectors and their magnitudes (e.g., v, |v|, ||v||, v).
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.A.2
Standard
(+) Find the components of a vector by subtracting the coordinates of an initial point from the coordinates of a terminal point.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.A.3
Standard
(+) Solve problems involving velocity and other quantities that can be represented by vectors.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.B.4
Standard
(+) Add and subtract vectors.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.B.5
Standard
(+) Multiply a vector by a scalar.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.C.6
Standard
(+) Use matrices to represent and manipulate data, e.g., to represent payoffs or incidence relationships in a network.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.C.7
Standard
(+) Multiply matrices by scalars to produce new matrices, e.g., as when all of the payoffs in a game are doubled.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.C.8
Standard
(+) Add, subtract, and multiply matrices of appropriate dimensions.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.C.9
Standard
(+) Understand that, unlike multiplication of numbers, matrix multiplication for square matrices is not a commutative operation, but still satisfies the associative and distributive properties.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.C.10
Standard
(+) Understand that the zero and identity matrices play a role in matrix addition and multiplication similar to the role of 0 and 1 in the real numbers. The determinant of a square matrix is nonzero if and only if the matrix has a multiplicative inverse.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.C.11
Standard
(+) Multiply a vector (regarded as a matrix with one column) by a matrix of suitable dimensions to produce another vector. Work with matrices as transformations of vectors.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.C.12
Standard
(+) Work with 2 × 2 matrices as transformations of the plane, and interpret the absolute value of the determinant in terms of area.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.B.4a
Component
Add vectors end-to-end, component-wise, and by the parallelogram rule. Understand that the magnitude of a sum of two vectors is typically not the sum of the magnitudes.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.B.4b
Component
Given two vectors in magnitude and direction form, determine the magnitude and direction of their sum.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.B.4c
Component
Understand vector subtraction v - w as v + (-w), where -w is the additive inverse of w, with the same magnitude as w and pointing in the opposite direction. Represent vector subtraction graphically by connecting the tips in the appropriate order, and perform vector subtraction component-wise.
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.B.5a
Component
Represent scalar multiplication graphically by scaling vectors and possibly reversing their direction; perform scalar multiplication component-wise, e.g., as c(v<sub>x</sub>, v<sub>y</sub>) = (cv<sub>x</sub>, cv<sub>y</sub>).
CCSS.Math.Content.HSN-VM.B.5b
Component
Compute the magnitude of a scalar multiple cv using ||cv|| = |c|v. Compute the direction of cv knowing that when |c|v ? 0, the direction of cv is either along v (for c > 0) or against v (for c < 0).
Framework metadata
- Source document
- Common Core State Standards for Mathematics (2010)
- License
- CC BY 3.0 US
- Normalized subject
- Math