In this lesson:
By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
All three mean the same thing: evaluate what is inside me first
Start with the innermost group — work outward one layer at a time.
Step 1: Innermost group — the parentheses (5 − 2) = 3 → expression becomes: [3 × 3] + 4
Step 2: Next group — the brackets [3 × 3] = 9 → expression becomes: 9 + 4
Step 3: Evaluate what remains 9 + 4 = 13
Evaluate step by step — write every rewrite:
Step 1: Innermost group ( ) → _____ = _____
→ expression becomes: [6 + _____] − 7
Step 2: Brackets [ ] → _____ = _____
→ expression becomes: _____ − 7
Step 3: Final answer → _____
In the expression {[(2 + 3) × 4] + 1}, which group do you evaluate first?
Which group has nothing else nested inside it?
Level 1 — innermost parentheses: (4 × 1) = 4 → {3 × [2 + 4]} + 6
Level 2 — brackets: [2 + 4] = 6 → {3 × 6} + 6
Level 3 — braces: {3 × 6} = 18 → 18 + 6 = 24
For any nested expression, fill in each line:
Original → {[5 × (3 + 2)] − 8}
After ( ) → _______________
After [ ] → _______________
After { } → _______________
Final answer → _______________
Use this template whenever you face a nested expression
✓ ( ), [ ], and { } are all grouping symbols — same rule for all three ✓ With nested grouping: start with the innermost group, work outward ✓ Rewrite the expression after each group is evaluated — show every step
Watch out: Start with the innermost ( ) — not the outermost { } Watch out: [ ] and { } follow the same rule as ( ) — no extra rules for different symbols
You can now:
Next up: writing and interpreting numerical expressions (5.OA.A.2)
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Use parentheses, brackets, or braces in numerical expressions