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Plug a number into a letter to quickly find the value of any math expression.
Long ago, people used words for math problems. They needed a better way to solve unknown amounts. Variables like x or y let us use letters for unknowns. This made math faster and easier to use every day.
Evaluating expressions solves real problems like figuring game scores. You replace the variable with a number. This skill builds confidence for harder math.
An algebraic expression is numbers and variables combined with signs like + or ×. A variable is a letter standing for a number. To evaluate, replace the variable with its value. Then follow order of operations.
See how the letter x gets replaced by 5? This visual helps you picture the change. Practice this flow to make evaluating easy and fun.
Always substitute first, then simplify using PEMDAS. PEMDAS means do parentheses first, then exponents, multiply or divide, add or subtract.
This pyramid reminds you the order. In expressions with variables, substitute first like invisible parentheses. You can master this with practice!
See how each step builds? You did it! This method works every time on the SSAT.
| Mistake | Why Wrong | Correct Way |
|---|---|---|
| Forgetting PEMDAS | Doing 2 + 3 × 4 as 20 instead of 14. | Multiply first: 3×4=12, then +2=14. |
| No parentheses on substitute | Writing 3x +2 as 3*5 +2=35 instead of 17. | Use 3(5) + 2. |
| Evaluating | Simplifying | Solving Equations |
|---|---|---|
| Plug in number for variable. | Combine like terms: 2x + 3x = 5x. | Find variable: 2x = 10, x=5. |
| x=2 → 2x+1=5. | No number given. | 2x+1=7 to solve. |
Master evaluating now. It leads to solving real SSAT problems like distances in sports.
You now know how to evaluate expressions by substituting variables and using PEMDAS. Practice builds speed for SSAT success.
Key: Substitute, then order of operations. You're ready—great job!