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The purpose of this Warm-up is for students to recognize prisms and their bases. This concept reinforces what was discussed in the previous lesson where students found the volume of different prisms and non-prisms. Students first determine whether or not a given figure is a prism and then shade and describe the base of the prism. As students work on the task, monitor for students who are using precise language to describe the reason that a figure is a prism.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give students 1 minute of quiet work time, followed by time to discuss their answers with a partner. Follow this with a whole-class discussion.
Which of these solids are prisms? Explain how you know.
For each of the prisms, what does the base look like?
Shade one base in the picture.
Draw a cross-section of the prism parallel to the base.
If students struggle to see why figure B is a prism, consider asking:
The goal of this activity is to remind students that a figure is a prism if the cross-section, when cut parallel to the base, has the same size and shape as the base of the figure. Select previously identified students to share their reasoning. Invite students to share the bases that they shaded and their drawings of the cross-sections.
In this activity, students practice mentally decomposing, into simpler prisms, a more-complicated prism that has a non-rectangular base. The decomposition corresponds to a decomposition of a complicated two-dimensional figure into simpler two-dimensional figures. This expands on students’ ability to calculate the area of a base of a figure and to rely on the structure of a prism to find its volume (MP7). This prepares students to calculate the volume of this figure and other figures in future lessons.
As students work in their groups, monitor for the different ways in which students are decomposing or constructing the base of the figure into more familiar shapes.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Introduce the context of a heart-shaped box of chocolates. Use Co-Craft Questions to orient students to the context and to elicit possible mathematical questions.
A box of chocolates is a prism with a base in the shape of a heart and a height of 2 inches. Here are the measurements of the base.
To calculate the volume of the box, three different students have each drawn line segments showing how they plan on finding the area of the heart-shaped base.
Return your partner’s work. Calculate the volume of the box of chocolates.
The purpose of this discussion is to clarify decomposing shapes to find area, which can then be used to calculate the volume. Select students to share whose method they decided to use and why. Ask students:
Explain to students that they might encounter figures that have non-rectangular bases in future activities or lessons. It will be important for them to think about different strategies to calculate the area of the base.
In this activity, students practice finding the volume of another prism with a non-rectangular base by applying the formula .
As students work on the task, monitor for students who decompose or compose the base of the figure into more familiar shapes.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Give students 1–2 minutes of quiet work time followed by time, to discuss their work with a partner. Follow with a whole-class discussion.
A house-shaped prism is created by attaching a triangular prism on top of a rectangular prism.
Draw the base of this prism and label its dimensions.
What is the area of the base? Explain or show your reasoning.
The goal of this activity is to compare different methods of decomposing the base of the prism. Select previously identified students to share the different methods for calculating the area of base. If not brought up by students, explain to students that the base of this figure can either be decomposed into rectangles and triangles or be composed into a larger rectangle by adding two additional triangles. Ask students how they used the area of the base to calculate the volume of the figure (area of the base multiplied by the height).
Here, we mostly imagined cutting the base apart to find its area, but we could have imagined cutting the original object into smaller objects, and then finding the volume of each piece and adding them together.
To find the area of any polygon, you can decompose it into rectangles and triangles. There are always many ways to decompose a polygon.
Sometimes it is easier to enclose a polygon in a rectangle and subtract the area of the extra pieces.
To find the volume of a prism with a polygon for a base, you find the area of the base, , and multiply that by the height, .
If students mistake the rectangle for the base of the figure, ask students how we know that this figure is a prism and what the base of this figure needs to be in order to consider it a prism.