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Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Write and Evaluate Expressions with Exponents

Lesson 1 of 1: Expressions and Equations

In this lesson:

  • Write repeated multiplication using exponential notation
  • Evaluate expressions with whole-number exponents
  • Distinguish base from exponent to avoid computation errors
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Learning Objectives for This Lesson

By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:

  1. Write repeated multiplication using exponential notation — identify the base and exponent
  2. Evaluate expressions with whole-number exponents, including perfect squares and perfect cubes
  3. Distinguish between the base and the exponent; avoid multiplying base × exponent
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

A Better Way to Write Repeated Products

  • You already know how to compute 2 × 2 × 2 × 2 × 2 = 32
  • What if you needed to write 2 multiplied by itself twenty times?
  • Mathematicians created a compact shorthand for this: exponential notation
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Base and Exponent: Reading the Notation

Diagram of the expression 2 to the 5th power with arrows: one labeled "base — the repeated factor" pointing to the 2, and one labeled "exponent — how many times" pointing to the 5

Base = the repeated factor | Exponent = how many times it appears

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Writing Repeated Multiplication in Exponent Form

Count the factors — that number becomes the exponent:

  • 5 × 5 × 5 = (three 5s; "5 cubed")
  • 2 × 2 × 2 × 2 = (four 2s; "2 to the fourth")
  • 10 × 10 = (two 10s; "10 squared")
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Expanding Exponent Notation into Repeated Factors

  • = 4 × 4 × 4 = 64
  • = 10 × 10 × 10 × 10 = 10,000
  • = 1 × 1 × 1 × 1 × 1 × 1 = 1
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Exponent Counts Factors, Not a Multiplier

  • The exponent tells you how many factors of the base to write
  • = 2 × 2 × 2 = 8 ← three factors of 2
  • ← wrong: exponent is not a multiplier
  • Rule: always expand first, then multiply
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Quick Check: Writing and Expanding Exponents

Answer both before advancing:

  1. Write 7 × 7 × 7 × 7 using exponent notation. What is the base? What is the exponent?
  2. Expand as repeated multiplication. How many factors of 3 are there?

Pause — work it out, then advance to check.

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Check-In Answers: Writing and Expanding

  1. 7 × 7 × 7 × 7 = — base is 7, exponent is 4

  2. = 3 × 3 × 3 × 3 — exponent 4 counts four factors of 3

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

From Writing to Evaluating: Computing the Value

  • So far: writing repeated products as and expanding into repeated factors
  • Next: evaluating — computing the numerical value of an exponential expression
  • Method: expand into repeated factors first, then multiply left to right
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Evaluating Exponential Expressions Step by Step

Procedure:

  1. Identify the base and the exponent
  2. Expand: write the base as a repeated multiplication
  3. Multiply left to right, recording each partial product

Quick example: → 4 × 4 × 4 → 16 × 4 = 64

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Evaluating Expressions with Partial Products

: 3 × 3 = 9 → × 3 = 27 → × 3 = 81

: 5 × 5 = 25

: 2 × 2 = 4 → × 2 = 8 → × 2 = 16 → × 2 = 32 → × 2 = 64

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Powers Reference Table: Squares, Cubes, and Tens

Reference table with three labeled columns: perfect squares showing 1 squared equals 1 through 5 squared equals 25, perfect cubes showing 1 cubed equals 1 through 3 cubed equals 27, and powers of 10 showing 10 to the first equals 10 through 10 to the fourth equals 10 comma 000

Pattern for powers of 10: the exponent equals the number of zeros.

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Special Cases: Exponent One and Exponent Zero

  • Any base to the first power equals itself: (one factor)
  • Any base to the zero power equals 1: (explained in Grade 8)
  • Geometric link: = area of a square with side ; = volume of a cube
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Quick Check: Evaluate and Spot the Error

Evaluate both expressions, showing your expanded form:

  1. = ?
  2. = ?

Spot the error: A student claims . What is the correct value, and what mistake did the student make?

Work it out before advancing.

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Check-In Answers: Evaluate and Spot the Error

  1. : 4 × 4 = 16, then 16 × 4 = 64
  2. : 10 × 10 = 100

Error correction: , not 30. The mistake: multiplied 10 × 3 instead of expanding three factors of 10.

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Key Takeaways and Common Mistakes to Avoid

✓ Exponent = how many times the base appears as a factor
✓ Evaluate: expand into repeated multiplication, multiply step by step
✓ Squared = exponent 2; cubed = exponent 3

⚠️ Watch out: , not 6 — expand first; don't multiply base × exponent
⚠️ Watch out: , not 12 — multiply factors, don't add them
⚠️ Watch out: , not 30 — expand three factors of 10

Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1
Exponents | Lesson 1 of 1

Coming Up Next: Variables in Expressions

  • Next lesson: 6.EE.A.2 — evaluating algebraic expressions with variables
  • You'll apply these same skills when computing for a cube's volume
  • The notation and evaluation procedure carry forward directly
Grade 6 Mathematics | 6.EE.A.1