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What do you notice? What do you wonder?
You may recall that the term area tells us something about the number of squares inside a two-dimensional shape.
Your teacher will give you 1 square and some small, medium, and large right triangles. The area of the square is 1 square unit.
Recall that the area of the square you saw earlier is 1 square unit. Complete each statement and explain your reasoning.
Here are two important principles for finding area:
If two figures can be placed one on top of the other so that they match up exactly, then they have the same area.
We can decompose a figure (break a figure into pieces) and rearrange the pieces (move the pieces around) to find its area.
Here are illustrations of the two principles.
Similarly, the large triangle on the right can be decomposed into 4 equal triangles. The triangles can be rearranged to form 2 squares. If each square has an area of 1 square unit, then the area of the large triangle is 2 square units. We also can say that each small triangle has an area of square unit.
Area is the number of square units that cover a two-dimensional region without gaps or overlaps.