Description
The last few weeks of 8th grade are brutal. Students are checked out, the weather is beautiful, and you still have a full roster of standards to review before they walk out the door. Sound familiar? After 12 years in the classroom, I built this unit because I was tired of watching my kids disengage right when it mattered most.
Here is the idea: your students hike the Pacific Crest Trail. Not literally, but mathematically. Over 8 structured worksheets, they trek through the wilderness solving real problems that just happen to cover every core standard you need — equations, exponents, scientific notation, square and cube roots, transformations, the Pythagorean theorem, inequalities, and systems of equations.
But here is the part my students lose their minds over: the trail budget. Every hiker starts with a set amount of money and manages it at each checkpoint. Then they draw a scenario card. A bear got into your food bag? Lose money. You found a 50-dollar bill on the trail? Add it. Rain delayed your group? Budget adjustment. These cards bring in real-world financial literacy and make every single checkpoint feel like a genuine consequence. Kids who never cared about math suddenly care because THEY are the hiker, and THEIR budget is on the line.
What is inside:
– 8 print-and-go student worksheets, one per standard
– Scenario card deck with randomized trail events
– Trail budget tracking sheet students maintain the entire unit
– Teacher guide with pacing suggestions and answer keys
– Checkpoint debrief prompts for quick class discussions
This is genuinely low-prep. Print the packet, hand out the scenario cards, and your students are hiking. It works as a whole-class activity, in small groups, or as an independent end-of-year project. I have used it all three ways.
The storytelling scaffold is what keeps 8th graders in their seats. When math has a reason — when solving for x tells you whether you can afford your next resupply — students finish the work. Every worksheet. Every standard. And they feel proud when they reach the end of the trail.
This has become the unit my class looks forward to all year. I think it will become that for yours too.