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  1. Sep 2, 2019 · Ordering Numbers Practice Questions. Next: Cube Numbers and Cube Roots Practice Questions. The Corbettmaths Practice Questions on the Order of Operations.

  2. In mathematics and computer programming, the order of operations is a collection of rules that reflect conventions about which operations to perform first in order to evaluate a given mathematical expression. These rules are formalized with a ranking of the operations.

    • Order of Operations
    • How Do I Remember It All ... ? Bodmas !
    • Exponents of Exponents ...

    Do things in Brackets First Exponents(Powers, Roots) before Multiply, Divide, Add or Subtract Multiply or Divide before you Add or Subtract Otherwise just go left to right

    So do it this way: Note: the only strange name is "Orders". You may prefer GEMS (Grouping, Exponents, Multiply or Divide, Add or Subtract). Or in the US where they say "Parentheses" instead of Brackets, so it is "PEMDAS".

    What about this example? 432 Exponents are special: they go top-down(do the exponent at the top first). So we calculate this way: So 432 = 4(32), not (43)2 And finally, what about the example from the beginning?

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  4. Mathematical inquiry processes: identify properties; generate more examples; extend a pattern. Conceptual field of inquiry: Order of operations. The prompt was designed to introduce the order of operations to a year 7 class.

  5. The order of operations is the rule that tells you which bit of a calculation to do first. Find out more in this Bitesize Primary KS2 Maths guide.

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  7. Master the Order of Operations with our comprehensive guide, covering essential concepts like PEMDAS, BODMAS, exponents, and algebraic expressions.

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