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Give students 2 minutes of quiet work time and access to their geometry toolkits.
Students should be adequately familiar with bases and heights to begin the warm-up. If needed, however, briefly review the relationship between a pair of base and height in a parallelogram, using questions such as:
Here are two copies of a parallelogram. Each copy has one side labeled as the base and a segment drawn for its corresponding height and labeled .
Some students may not know how to begin answering the questions because measurements are not shown on the diagrams. Ask students to label the parallelograms based on the information in the Task Statement.
Students may say that there is not enough information to answer the second question because only one piece of information is known (the height). Ask them what additional information might be needed. Prompt them to revisit the task statement and see what it says about the two parallelograms. Ask what they know about the areas of two figures that are identical.
Students may know what to do to find the unknown base in the second question but be unsure how to divide a number containing a decimal. Ask them to explain how they would reason about it if the area were a whole number. If they understand that they need to divide the area by 2 (because the height is 2 cm and the area is 2.4 sq cm), encourage them to reason in terms of multiplication, for instance by asking, “2 times what number is 2.4?” Or, urge them to consider dividing using fractions, for instance, by seeing 2.4 as or . Ask, “what is 24 tenths divided by 2?”
Select 1–2 previously identified students to share their responses. If not already explained by students, emphasize that we know the parallelograms have the same area because they are identical, which means that when one is placed on top of the other they would match up exactly.
Before moving on, ask students: “How can we verify that the height we found is correct, or that the two pairs of bases and heights produce the same area?" (We can multiply the values of each pair and see if they both produce 2.4.)
Two shapes are identical if they match up exactly when placed one on top of the other.
Draw one line to decompose each shape into two identical triangles, if possible. Use a straightedge to draw your line.
Which quadrilaterals can be decomposed into two identical triangles?
Pause here for a small-group discussion.
It may not occur to students to rotate triangles to check congruence. If so, tell students that we still consider two triangles identical even when one needs to be rotated to match the other.
Students may incorrectly generalize that Figure E can be decomposed into two identical triangles because it shares some common characteristics with Figures A, B, and D: It has two sides that are parallel, two sides that are the same length, and two pairs of equal-size angles. Remind students to use the tools at their disposal to verify their thinking.
Keep students in the same groups. Give each group one set (6 pairs) of triangles labeled P, Q, R, S, T, and U from the blackline master and access to scissors if the triangles are not pre-cut. Instruct each group member to take 1–2 pairs of triangles.
Remind students that in the previous activity they saw that certain types of quadrilaterals can be decomposed into two identical triangles. Explain that they will now see if it is possible to compose quadrilaterals out of two identical triangles and, if so, to find out what types of quadrilaterals would result.
Give students 1–2 minutes of quiet work time for the first question. Then, give them 5 minutes to discuss their responses and answer the second question with their group.
Your teacher will give your group several pairs of triangles. Each group member should take 1 or 2 pairs.
Which pair(s) of triangles do you have?
Can each pair be composed into a rectangle? A parallelogram?
Discuss with your group your responses to the first question. Then, complete each statement with All, Some, or None. Sketch 1 or 2 examples to illustrate each completed statement.
________________ of these pairs of identical triangles can be composed into a rectangle.
________________ of these pairs of identical triangles can be composed into a parallelogram.
Students may draw incorrect conclusions if certain pieces of their triangles are turned over (to face down), or if it did not occur to them that the pieces could be moved. Ask them to try manipulating the pieces in different ways.
Seeing that two copies of a triangle can always be composed into a parallelogram, students might mistakenly conclude that any two copies of a triangle can only be composed into a parallelogram (that is, no other quadrilaterals can be formed from joining two identical triangles). Showing a counterexample may be a simple way to help students see that this is not the case.