Not all roles available for this page.
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.
The purpose of this activity is for students to identify the hypotenuse in right triangles in different orientations.
Label all the hypotenuses with .
The goal of this discussion is to make sure students understand that only right triangles have a hypotenuse, and that in a right triangle the hypotenuse is always the side opposite the right angle.
Here are some questions for discussion:
The purpose of this activity is for students to work through an area-based algebraic proof of the Pythagorean Theorem (MP1). Figure G was first encountered by students in an earlier unit on transformations.
While there are many proofs of the Pythagorean Theorem similar to the one in this activity, they often rely on , which is beyond the scope of grade 8. For this proof, students reason about the areas of the two squares with the same dimensions. Each square is divided into smaller regions in different ways. Using the equality of the total area of each square, they uncover the Pythagorean Theorem. The extension uses this same division to solve a challenging area composition and decomposition problem.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Tell students to close their books or devices (or to keep them closed). Display the images from the Task Statement for all to see and begin by explaining how the two figures are constructed.
The corners must be 90 degree angles:
Use Co-Craft Questions to orient students to the context and elicit possible mathematical questions.
Without revealing the questions, give students 1–2 minutes to write a list of mathematical questions that could be asked about the images before comparing questions with a partner.
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 questions about the total area for each square or the area of each of the nine smaller regions of the squares.
Reveal the question, “What is the total area of each figure?” and give students 1–2 minutes to compare it to their own question and those of their classmates. Invite students to identify similarities and differences by asking:
“Which of your questions is most similar to or different from the ones provided? Why?”
Give students 3 minutes of quiet work time for the first two problems. Ask partners to share their work and come to an agreement on the area of each figure and region before moving on to the last problem. Follow with a whole-class discussion.
The goal of this discussion is to make sure students understand this area-based algebraic proof of the Pythagorean Theorem. Display the image from the Task Statement for all to see.
Select 2–3 groups to share their work for the third question. Make sure the last group presenting concludes with or something close enough that the class can get there with a little prompting. For example, if groups are stuck with the equation looking something like , encourage them to try and combine like terms and remove any quantities both sides have in common.
Here are some questions for discussion:
“How do you see regions from one figure matching regions in the other figure?” (The two small squares in Figure F match the one large square in Figure G.)
“How do the rectangles and triangles match?” (The area of the two rectangles is the same as the area of four of the triangles, since two of the triangles together make a rectangle that is wide and long.)
If needed, show students an image with the diagonals added in, such as the one shown here, to help make the connection between the two figures clearer.
Note how these figures can be made for any right triangle with legs and and hypotenuse .
Optional
In this optional activity, students explore a transformations-based proof of the Pythagorean Theorem. Since this proof is not one students are expected to derive on their own, the focus is on understanding why the steps are possible from a transformations perspective.
In the digital version of the activity, students use an applet to compare the areas of two smaller squares to the area of one larger square. The applet allows students to decompose the two smaller squares into smaller pieces and quickly rearrange them. This activity works best when each student has access to the applet and when having students cut shapes from the handout may take more time than is available. If students don't have individual access, displaying the applet for all to see would be helpful during the synthesis.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Tell them that they are going to explore the areas of 3 different squares.
Instruct students to cut out Figure 1 into 5 shapes.
Your teacher will give your group a sheet with 4 figures. Cut out the 5 shapes in Figure 1.
Arrange the 5 cut out shapes to fit inside Figure 2.
Now arrange the shapes to fit inside Figure 3.
Check to see that Figure 3 is congruent to the large square in Figure 4.
Check to see that the 5 cut out shapes fit inside the two smaller squares in Figure 4.
If the right triangle in Figure 4 has legs and and hypotenuse , what have you just demonstrated to be true?
The goal of this discussion is for students to see that the sum of the areas of the 2 smaller squares is congruent to the area of the larger square. Invite several groups to share their answers to the last question.
The purpose of this activity is to give students practice finding unknown side lengths in a right triangle using the Pythagorean Theorem.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give students 8–10 minutes of quiet work time followed by a partner discussion. Then follow with a whole-class discussion.
Find the value of in the figure.
The purpose of this discussion is for students to share how they calculated the unknown side lengths. Ask students to share their answers and reasoning for the first two questions. For the third question with sides of length 2.4 cm and 6.5 cm, display any triangles students drew for all to see, noting any differences. For example, students may have drawn triangles with different orientations or labeled different sides as and .
Then use Critique, Correct, Clarify to give students an opportunity to improve a sample written response for finding the unknown side length for the triangle with known side length and hypotenuse by correcting errors, clarifying meaning, and adding details.
Draw a right triangle with legs labeled and . Then display this first draft next to it: “I know that and , so when I use the Pythagorean Theorem, I get the equation .”
Ask, “What parts of this response are unclear, incorrect, or incomplete?” As students respond, annotate the display with 2–3 ideas to indicate the parts of the writing that could use improvement.
Give students 2–4 minutes to work with a partner to revise the first draft.
Select 1–2 individuals or groups to read their revised draft aloud slowly enough to record for all to see. Scribe as each student shares, then invite the whole class to contribute additional language and edits to make the final draft even more clear and more convincing.
Point out that when two sides of a right triangle are known, the third can always be found by using the Pythagorean Theorem. Remind students it is important to keep track of which side is the hypotenuse.
The goal of this discussion is to review what students know about triangles where the Pythagorean Theorem does and does not work and to reinforce for students how to use it. Arrange students in groups of 2 and ask each student to draw 2 triangles on a blank sheet of paper: one where the Pythagorean Theorem works and one where it does not. Tell students to compare their triangles with their partner. Discuss:
“What is the same and different about the triangles you and your partner drew where the Pythagorean Theorem does work?” (They were both right triangles. Our right triangles were different sizes and were facing different directions.)
“What is different between the triangles where the Pythagorean Theorem works and the triangles where it doesn’t?” (The triangles where it works have to have a right angle, and the triangles where it doesn’t work can be any other kind of triangle.)
Next, ask students to label their triangle where the Pythagorean Theorem works with and for the legs and for the hypotenuse and then share with their partner. Ask students if it matters which side is , , or . (The hypotenuse, or side opposite the right angle, has to be , but it does not matter which leg is or .)
If time allows, have students assign values to 2 of the 3 sides in their triangle where the Pythagorean Theorem works. Tell students to swap triangles with another student, solve for the missing length, then swap back to check the other person’s work. Select a few groups to share their triangles and, if possible, display them for all to see while sharing how they solved for the unknown length.
The Pythagorean Theorem can be used to find an unknown side length in a right triangle as long as the length of the other two sides is known.
For example, here is a right triangle, where one leg has a length of 5 units, the hypotenuse has a length of 10 units, and the length of the other leg is represented by .
Start with , make substitutions, and solve for the unknown value. Remember that represents the hypotenuse, the side opposite the right angle. For this triangle, the hypotenuse is 10.
Use estimation strategies to know that the length of the other leg is between 8 and 9 units, since 75 is between 64 and 81. A calculator with a square root function gives .
Both figures shown here are squares with a side length of . Notice that the first figure is divided into two squares and two rectangles. The second figure is divided into a square and four right triangles with legs of lengths and . Let’s call the hypotenuse of these triangles .