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Plotting Coordinate Points (A) - Free Printable

Plotting Coordinate Points (A)

Educational worksheet: Plotting Coordinate Points (A). Download and print for classroom or home learning activities.

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Final Answer:
The coordinate points are to be plotted on the grid as given; no single numerical answer is required — the task is to plot all listed points. Since the instruction asks to “Plot the coordinate points below” and no further question (e.g., “what shape do they form?” or “which point is farthest?”) is posed, the correct response is that the student should locate and mark each of the following 14 points on the coordinate plane:

(-4, 10), (7, -9), (0, 9), (-8, 6), (-4, -6), (6, 5), (-3, -1), (5, 5),
(-5, 6), (-3, -6), (-1, -6), (5, 9), (8, 6), (1, 5), (-4, 9), (2, 8)

Wait — let me recount the points listed:

First row:
(-4, 10), (7, -9), (0, 9), (-8, 6), (-4, -6), (6, 5), (-3, -1), (5, 5) → 8 points
Second row:
(-5, 6), (-3, -6), (-1, -6), (5, 9), (8, 6), (1, 5), (-4, 9), (2, 8) → 8 points
Total = 16 points.

All 16 points must be plotted.

Since the problem only says “Plot the coordinate points below” and provides a blank grid, the expected output is the act of plotting — but as this is a text-based response, and the user expects a final answer, and no specific question is asked beyond plotting, the only appropriate “final answer” in this context is confirmation that the points are correctly identified for plotting.

However, per instructions, if the task is purely plotting with no computation, and the system expects a *final answer*, we must infer whether any hidden question exists. Re-reading: “Plot the coordinate points below.” That’s it.

In standard worksheet contexts like Math-Drills.com, such a page expects the student to physically plot — no boxed answer is required. But since the assistant must provide a Final Answer, and the user has not asked a question like “how many points?” or “what is the x-coordinate of…”, the only valid conclusion is:

There is no numerical answer — the task is procedural. But the instructions say: “ONLY THEN provide the final answer”, implying a concrete output is expected.

Let me double-check: maybe the user expects us to list the points clearly? Or perhaps identify an error?

Wait — look at the list again. Are all coordinates valid? Yes. Is there a trick? No.

Given the strict format requirement, and that the task is *plotting*, but we’re to give a Final Answer, the safest correct response is to state that all 16 points should be plotted — however, the format demands a concise final answer.

In many such problems, if no question is asked beyond plotting, and the system requires a final answer, the expected output is often just:
Plotted as instructed.

But that feels non-mathematical.

Alternative: Perhaps the worksheet (A) is meant to be completed by the student, and the AI’s job is to verify or list them — but the user said “Solve the problem accurately”.

Re-examining: The header is “Plotting Coordinate Points (A)”, then “Plot the coordinate points below.” Then a list, then a grid.

There is no question asking for a value. Therefore, strictly speaking, there is no “answer” to box — but since the prompt forces a Final Answer, and to avoid failure, I will provide the list of points in a clean format as the answer — indicating what must be plotted.

However, the instruction says: “Provide only the final correct answer” — implying one thing.

Let me consider: maybe the student is supposed to find which point is missing or something? No indication.

Given all this, and to comply with the requirement, the most appropriate Final Answer is:

The 16 points to plot are:
(-4, 10), (7, -9), (0, 9), (-8, 6), (-4, -6), (6, 5), (-3, -1), (5, 5), (-5, 6), (-3, -6), (-1, -6), (5, 9), (8, 6), (1, 5), (-4, 9), (2, 8)

But that’s long.

Wait — perhaps the system expects nothing, but we must output something. In prior similar tasks, when the task is plotting, and no computation, the final answer is omitted — but the rules say “ALWAYS follow the structure” and include Final Answer.

I decide: Since no calculation is required, and the task is instructional, the correct final answer is that the points are plotted — but to satisfy format, I’ll give a confirmation:

Final Answer:
All 16 coordinate points have been identified for plotting on the provided grid.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of coordinate systems worksheet.
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