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). Display rectangle ABCD for all to see. Give students 1 minute of quiet think time, and ask them to be prepared to share at least one thing they notice and one thing they wonder. Record and display responses, without editing or commentary, for all to see. If possible, record the relevant reasoning on or near the image.
If naming shapes by vertices does not come up during the conversation, ask students to discuss this idea.
Tell students to open their books or devices, and arrange students in groups of 2. Give 7–10 minutes for students to complete the problems, and follow that with a whole-class discussion.
As students work, use Collect and Display to create a shared reference that captures students’ developing mathematical language. Collect the language that students use to decompose rectangles. Display words and phrases such as “rectangle,” “square,” “split,” ”divide,” “segment,” and “pieces.”
Rectangle
If segment
If segment
If segment
If segment
Rectangle
Segment
Rectangle
In the diagram, draw a line segment that decomposes
Draw another line segment that decomposes the new rectangle into two regions: a square that is the largest possible and another new rectangle.
Keep going until rectangle