Misconception #1: Forgetting to Distribute to ALL Terms
Students often distribute only to the first term inside parentheses. Example: 2(x + 3) becomes 2x + 3 instead of 2x + 6.
How to Address:
"When you distribute, you're giving the multiplier to EVERY term inside the parentheses. Think of it like giving a gift to everyone at the party - no one gets left out! 2(x + 3) = 2 times x PLUS 2 times 3 = 2x + 6."
Misconception #2: Sign Errors When Moving Terms
Students subtract from one side but add to the other, or forget to change signs when moving terms across the equals sign.
How to Address:
"The equals sign is like a balance scale - whatever you do to one side, you MUST do to the other to keep it balanced. If you subtract 3 from the left, you subtract 3 from the right. The operation is the SAME on both sides!"
Misconception #3: Confusion About Special Cases
Students don't understand what it means when variables cancel out, leaving 5 = 5 (infinite solutions) or 3 = 7 (no solution).
How to Address:
"If all variables disappear and you get a TRUE statement like 5 = 5, that means ANY number works - infinite solutions! If you get a FALSE statement like 3 = 7, NO number can make this true - no solution!"