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Gas or Electric? Thinking Algebraically About Car Costs, Emissions and Trade-offs

Dashiell Young-Saver, New York Times Learning Network

This is an activity that uses basic algebra to assess the costs and savings of electric vehicles. It uses math to measure the trade-offs of buying electric versus gas-powered car models.

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Notes from our reviewers

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  • Provide students with the student PDF link ([link https://int.nyt.com/data/documenttools/thinking-algebraically-about-car-costs-emissions-and-trade-offs-student-version/4d500c9febb5fcf0/full.pdf]) rather than the NYTimes webpage link. Note that the interactive graphs are missing. The activity will still work even if the article it is based on is inaccessible or outdated. Consider breaking the activity into two daysâday 1 for warm-up questions and required reading, and day 2 for math activities. Consider incorporating more choices in lessons such as by letting students choose their own cars to compare. If the carbon counter tool is updated, the lesson should age ok and may hold timeliness more for upper middle school than high school. The EPA also has a tool ([link epa.gov/energy/greenhouse-gas-equivalences-calculator]) so a comparison of the two calculators with the same cars could be added. The premise is straightforward and related to real-world considerations. This might be something students would like to take home with them to contribute to a family decision, or to make an argument for their first car.