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.
This lesson is the first in a series of lessons in which students create shapes with given conditions. In this lesson, students experiment with making polygons of various numbers and combinations of side lengths, using cardboard strips and metal fasteners.
The goal of the lesson is for students to make sense of the different shapes that are possible under given constraints about side lengths, including whether only one shape is possible or no shape is possible (MP1). In this lesson, students do not try to formulate general rules about what side lengths are possible; in the next lesson, they formulate such a rule for triangles.
Let’s build shapes.
For the activities in this lesson and the next, you will need slips cut from copies of the "What Can You Build?" blackline master. Prepare 1 copy for every 2 students. These slips can be reused from one class to the next. To make the slips sturdier, it is recommended to copy them onto card stock. If card stock is not available, consider gluing each copy to light cardboard, such as a cereal box. Also if possible, copy each set of slips on a different color of paper, so that a stray strip can quickly be put back.
After the slips are cut, punch holes into the endpoints of each segment. A standard hole punch makes holes that are a little larger than needed for the metal paper fasteners, causing the cardboard strips to wiggle around. If possible, find a way to punch holes that are slightly smaller than the size of a standard hole punch.
Put each set of strips in an envelope. Prepare to distribute at least 12 metal paper fasteners (i.e., brass brads) to each group.
Note: If using the digital version of every activity, the strips and fasteners will not be needed.