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.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Display the image for all to see. Ask students to think of at least one thing they notice and at least one thing they wonder. Give students 1 minute of quiet think time, and then 1 minute to discuss with their partner the things they notice and wonder.
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
Ask students to share the things they noticed and wondered. Record and display their responses without editing or commentary. If possible, record the relevant reasoning on or near the image. Next, ask students, “Is there anything on this list that you are wondering about now?” Encourage students to observe what is on display and respectfully ask for clarification, point out contradicting information, or voice any disagreement.
If these ideas do not come up during the conversation, ask students to discuss:
Measure at least one set of corresponding angles using a protractor. Record your measurements to the nearest .
What do you notice about the angle measures?
Pause here so your teacher can review your work.
The side lengths of the polygons are hard to tell from the grid, but there are other corresponding distances that are easier to compare. Identify the distances in the other two polygons that correspond to and , and record them in the table.
| quadrilateral | distance that corresponds to |
distance that corresponds to |
|---|---|---|
Look at the values in the table. What do you notice?
Are these three quadrilaterals scaled copies? Explain your reasoning.
Some students may read the wrong number on the protractor, moving down from the mark instead of up from the mark, or reading the measurement outside of one of the lines forming the angle instead of between the two lines. Clarify the angle being measured, how to line up the protractor, or how to read the markings correctly.
Students may list the corresponding vertices for distances in the wrong order. For example, instead of writing as the distance corresponding to , they may write . Remind students of the corresponding points by asking, “Which vertex in corresponds to ? Which corresponds to ?” and have them match the order of the vertices accordingly.
Students may sort by the types of figures rather than by how the second figure in each pair is scaled from the first. Remind students to sort based on how Figure A is scaled to create Figure B.
Students may think of the change in lengths between Figures A and B in terms of addition or subtraction, rather than multiplication or division. Remind students of an earlier lesson in which they explored the effect of subtracting the same length from each side of a polygon in order to scale it. What happened to the copy? (It did not end up being a polygon and was not a scaled copy of the original one.)
Students may be unclear as to how to describe how much larger or smaller a figure is, or may not recall the meaning of scale factor. Have them compare the lengths of each side of the figure. What is the common factor by which each side is multiplied?
Students may incorporate the scale factor when scaling line segments but neglect to do so when scaling distances between two points not connected by a segment. Remind them that all distances are scaled by the same factor.
Students may not remember to verify that the angles in their copies must remain the same as the original. Ask them to notice the angles and recall what happens to angles when a figure is a scaled copy.