New Mexico
Content Standards, Benchmarks, and
Performance Standards
Mathematics – Fifth Grade
The Process Standards of Problems Solving, Reasoning and Proof,
Communication, Connections and Representation are the foundation of
mathematics teaching and are Power Standards because they meet the
criteria of Readiness, Leverage and Endurance.
STRAND 1: NUMBER AND OPERATIONS
STANDARD: Students will
understand numerical concepts and mathematical operations.
5-8 Benchmark: Understand
numbers, ways of representing numbers, relationships among numbers, and
number systems.
MA 5.1.1 Compare and order using concrete or
illustrated models:
• whole number (to millions)
• common
fractions (halves, thirds, fourths, eighths)
•
decimals (thousandths)
MA 5.1.2 Demonstrates understanding of the
magnitude of the value of numbers from thousandths to millions,
including common fractions.
MA 5.1.3 Represent place value using concrete
or illustrated models up to one billion
(1,000,000,000).
MA 5.1.4 Interpret percents as part of a
hundred (i.e., find decimals and percent equivalents for common
fractions, explain how they represent the
same value, and compute a given percent of a whole
number).
MA 5.1.5 Identify and represent on a number
line decimals, fractions, and mixed numbers.
MA 5.1.6 Identify prime and composite numbers
to 50.
5-8 Benchmark: Understand the
meaning of operations and how they relate to one another.
MA 5.1.7 Explain and perform whole
number division and express remainders as a whole number or a
fractional part as appropriate to the
context of real-life problems.
MA 5.1.8 Add and subtract
decimals.
MA 5.1.9 Add and subtract fractions
and mixed numbers without regrouping and express answers in simplest
form.
MA 5.1.10 Find the factors and multiples of
whole numbers.
MA 5.1.11 Use arithmetic operations and inverse
relationships to represent and solve real-world
problems.
MA 5.1.12 Identify and represent on a number
line decimals, fractions, and mixed numbers.
MA 5.1.13 Demonstrate proficiency with
division, including one- and two-digit divisors.
MA 5.1.14 Solve simple problems involving the
addition and subtraction of fractions and mixed
numbers.
MA 5.1.15 Represent and use fractions and
decimals in equivalent forms.
5-8 Benchmark: Compute fluently
and make reasonable estimates.
MA 5.1.16 Add, subtract, multiply,
and divide whole numbers.
MA 5.1.17 Add and subtract
decimals.
MA 5.1.18 Use estimation strategies
to verify the reasonableness of calculated results.
MA 5.1.19 Explain how the
estimation strategy impacts the result.
MA 5.1.20 Relate the basic
arithmetic operations to one another (e.g., multiplication and division
are inverse operations).
MA 5.1.21 Simplify numerical
expressions using order of operations.
MA 5.1.22 Recognize and explain the
differences between exact and approximate values.
STRAND 2: ALGEBRA
STANDARD: Students will
understand algebraic concepts and applications.
5-8 Benchmark: Understand
patterns, relations, and functions.
MA 5.2.1 Identify and graph ordered pairs
in the first quadrant of the coordinate plane.
MA 5.2.2 Describe, represent, and analyze
patterns and relationships.
MA 5.2.3 Identify, describe, and continue
patterns presented in a variety of formats (e.g., numeric, visual,
oral, written, kinesthetic, and
pictorial).
MA 5.2.4 Generate a pattern using a
written description.
5-8 Benchmark: Represent and
analyze mathematical situations and structures using algebraic symbols.
MA 5.2.5 Compute the value of the
expression for specific numerical values of the
variable.
MA 5.2.6 Use a letter to represent an
unknown number.
MA 5.2.7 Understand the differences
between the symbols for “less than”, “less than or equal to”, “greater
than”, and “greater than or equal to”.
5-8 Benchmark: Use mathematical
models to represent and understand quantitative relationships.
MA 5.2.8 Use mathematical models to
represent and explain mathematical concepts and
procedures.
MA 5.2.9 Understand and use mathematical
models such as:
•
the number line to model the relationship between rational numbers and
rational number operations
•
pictorial representation of addition and subtraction of rational
numbers with regrouping
•
manipulatives or pictures to model computational procedures
•
graphs, tables, and charts to describe data
•
diagrams or pictures to model problem situations
MA 5.2.10 Demonstrate how a situation can
be represented in more than one way.
5-8 Benchmark: Analyze changes
in various contexts.
MA 5.2.11 Recognize and create patterns
of change from everyday life using numerical or pictorial
representations.
MA 5.2.12 Generalize patterns of change
and recognize the same general patterns presented in different
representations.
STRAND 3: GEOMETRY
STANDARD: Students will understand
geometric concepts and applications.
5-8 Benchmark: Analyze
characteristics and properties of two- and three-dimensional geometric
shapes and develop mathematical arguments about geometric relationships.
MA 5.3.1 Identify, describe,
and classify two-dimensional shapes and three-dimensional figures by
their properties.
MA 5.3.2 Recognize and describe
properties of regular polygons having up to ten
sides.
MA 5.3.3 Identify faces, edges, and
bases on three-dimensional objects.
5-8 Benchmark: Specify locations
and describe spatial relationships using coordinate geometry and other
representational systems.
MA 5.3.4 Recognize perpendicular
and parallel lines.
5-8 Benchmark: Apply
transformations and use symmetry to analyze mathematical situations.
MA 5.3.5 Identify line of symmetry
in simple geometric figures.
5-8 Benchmark: Use
visualization, spatial reasoning, and geometric modeling to solve
problems.
MA 5.3.6 Understand and compute the
perimeter of regular polygons.
MA 5.3.7 Identify and explain
circumference, radius, and diameter.
STRAND 4: MEASUREMENT
STANDARD: Students will
understand measurement systems and applications.
5-8 Benchmark: Understand
measurable attributes of objects and the units, systems, and processes
of measurement.
MA 5.4.1 Understand properties
(e.g., length, area, weight, volume) and select the appropriate type of
unit for measuring each using both U.S.
customary and
metric systems.
MA 5.4.2 Select and use appropriate
units and tools to measure according to the degree of accuracy required
in a particular problem-solving
situation.
MA 5.4.3 Solve problems involving
linear measurement, weight, and capacity (e.g., measuring to the
nearest sixteenth of an inch or nearest
millimeter; using ounces, milliliter, or pounds and kilograms) to the
appropriate degree of accuracy.
MA 5.4.4 Perform one-step
conversions within a system of measurement (e.g., inches to feet,
centimeters to meters).
5-8 Benchmark: Apply appropriate
techniques, tools, and formulas to determine measurements.
MA 5.4.5 Solve measurement problems
using appropriate tools involving length, perimeter, weight, capacity,
time, and temperature.
MA 5.4.6 Select and use strategies
to estimate measurements including length, distance, capacity, and
time.
MA 5.4.7 Apply strategies and use
tools for estimating and measuring the perimeter of regular and
irregular shapes.
STRAND 5: DATA ANALYSIS AND
PROBABILITY
STANDARD: Students will understand
how to formulate questions, analyze data, and determine probabilities.
5-8 Benchmark: Formulate
questions that can be addressed with data and collect, organize, and
display relevant data to answer them.
MA 5.5.1 Construct, read, analyze,
and interpret tables, charts, graphs, and data plots.
MA 5.5.2 Construct, interpret, and
analyze data from graphical representations and draw simple conclusions
using bar graphs, line graphs, circle
graphs, frequency tables, and Venn
diagrams.
MA 5.5.3 Display, analyze, compare,
and interpret different data sets, including data sets of different
sizes.
MA 5.5.4 Organize and display
single-variable data in appropriate graphs and
representations.
MA 5.5.5 Organize, read, and
display numerical (quantitative) and non-numerical (qualitative) data
in a clear, organized, and accurate manner
including correct
titles, labels, and intervals or categories including:
•
frequency tables
•
stem and leaf plots
•
bar, line, and circle graphs
•
Venn diagrams
•
pictorial displays
•
charts and tables
MA 5.5.6 Formulate questions and
identify data to be collected to correctly answer a
question.
5-8 Benchmark: Select and use
appropriate statistical methods to analyze data.
MA 5.5.7 Organize and display
single-variable data in appropriate graphs and representations and
determine which types of graphs are
appropriate for
various data sets.
MA 5.5.8 Use fractions and
percentages to compare data sets of different sizes.
MA 5.5.9 Correctly rank the values
of a numerical data set containing simple fractions and decimals,
identify maximum and minimum data
values, and
calculate the range for a data set.
STANDARD: Students will
understand how to formulate questions, analyze data, and determine
probabilities.
5-8 Benchmark: Develop and
evaluate inferences and predictions that are based on data.
MA 5.5.10 Make and justify valid
inferences, predictions, and arguments based on statistical
analysis.
MA 5.5.11 Compare a given
prediction with the results of an investigation.
MA 5.5.12 Use counting strategies
to determine all the possible outcomes of a particular familiar
event.
MA 5.5.13 Find all possible outcome
sets involving four or more sets of objects.
MA 5.5.14 Evaluate the
reasonableness of inferences that are based on data in the context of
the original solution.
MA 5.5.15 Identify the method used
to make an inference and/or a prediction on a given data set and solve
similar problems.
MA 5.5.16 Determine the accuracy of
a prediction or an inference based on the accuracy of the data in a
given data set.
MA 5.5.17 List all possible
outcomes of simple events.
5-8 Benchmark: Understand and
apply basic concepts of probability.
MA 5.5.18 Determine probabilities
through experiments and/or simulations and compare the results with
mathematical expressions.
MA 5.5.19 Make predictions from the
results of student-generated experiments of single
events.
MA 5.5.20 Identify simple
experiments where the probabilities of all outcomes are
equal.
MA 5.5.21 Describe and predict the
results of a probability experiment.
MA 5.5.22 Use fractions to describe
the results of an experiment.
MA 5.5.23 Use probability to
generalize from a simple pattern or set of examples and justify why the
generalization is reasonable.