Sign in to view assessments and invite other educators
Sign in using your existing Kendall Hunt account. If you don’t have one, create an educator account.
Tell students to close their books or devices (or to keep them closed). Arrange students in groups of 2. Display the image of a triangle with two parallel lines for all to see. Use Co-Craft Questions to orient students to the image and elicit possible mathematical questions.
Give students 1–2 minutes to write a list of mathematical questions that could be asked about the situation before comparing questions with a partner.
Here is triangle . Line is parallel to line .
Invite several partners to share one question with the class and record responses. Ask the class to make comparisons among the shared questions and their own. Ask, “What do these questions have in common? How are they different?” Listen for and amplify language related to the learning goal, such as using transformations to show the angle sum of triangles.
Here is triangle . Line is parallel to line .
What is the sum of the measures of angle , angle , and angle ?
Explain why your argument will work for any triangle: that is, explain why the sum of the angle measures in any triangle is .
Some students may say that and are the three angles in a triangle, so they add up to 180. Make sure that these students understand that the goal of this activity is to explain why this must be true. Encourage them to use their answer to the first question and think about what they know about different angles in the diagram.
For the last question students may not understand why their work in the previous question only shows for one particular triangle. Consider drawing a different triangle (without the parallel line to one of the bases), labeling the three angle measures , and asking the student why for this triangle.