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The purpose of this Warm-up is to connect prior student knowledge about triangles with rigid transformations, which will be useful when students perform rigid transformations on triangles in a later activity. While students may notice and wonder many things about this image, properties of triangles under rigid transformations are the important discussion points.
When students articulate what they notice and wonder, they have an opportunity to attend to precision in the language they use to describe what they see (MP6). They might first propose less formal or imprecise language, and then restate their observation with more precise language in order to communicate more clearly.
This prompt gives students opportunities to see and make use of structure (MP7). The specific structure they might notice is that since triangle has two side lengths of the same length, triangle must as well.
Arrange students in groups of 2. Display the image for all to see. Tell students that triangle is the image of triangle under a rigid transformation. Ask students to think of at least one thing they notice and at least one thing they wonder. Give students 1 minute of quiet think time, and then 1 minute to discuss the things they notice and wonder with their partner.
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
Ask students to share the things they noticed and wondered. Record and display their responses without editing or commentary for all to see. If possible, record the relevant reasoning on or near the image. Next, ask students, “Is there anything on this list that you are wondering about now?” Encourage students to observe what is on display and respectfully ask for clarification, point out contradicting information, or voice any disagreement.
If the idea that triangle could be a reflection or a rotation of triangle does not come up during the conversation, ask students to discuss this idea.
The purpose of this task is to use rigid transformations to explore the properties of a parallelogram. In an earlier course, students composed and rearranged two copies of a triangle to form a parallelogram. In this activity, students use the more precise language describing 180-degree rotations to describe this figure.
Students must also use an important property of 180-degree rotations, namely that the image of a line after a 180-degree rotation is parallel to that line. This is what allows them to conclude that the shape they have built is a parallelogram (MP7).
Here is triangle .
Draw midpoint of side .
Rotate triangle using center to form a new triangle. Draw this triangle, and label the new point .
What kind of quadrilateral is ? Explain how you know.
Students may struggle to see the 180-degree rotation using center . This may be because they do not understand that is the center of rotation or because they struggle with visualizing a 180-degree rotation. Offer these students patty paper, a transparency, or the rotation overlay from earlier in this unit to help them see the rotated triangle.
The purpose of this discussion is for students to connect properties of 180-degree rotations with features of a parallelogram. Ask students, “What happens to points and under the rotation?” (They end up at and , respectively.) This type of rotation and analysis will happen several times in upcoming lessons.
Next ask, “How do you know that the lines containing opposite sides of are parallel?” (They are taken to one another by a 180-degree rotation.) As seen previously, the image of a 180-degree rotation of a line is parallel to . Students also saw that when 180-degree rotations were applied to a pair of parallel lines it resulted in a (sometimes) new pair of parallel lines which were also parallel to the original lines. The logic here is the same, except that only one line is being rotated rather than a pair of lines. This does not need to be mentioned unless it is brought up by students.
Finally, ask students “How is the area of parallelogram related to the area of triangle ?” (The area of the parallelogram is twice the area of triangle because it is made up of and , which has the same area as .)
The purpose of this activity is for students to identify rigid transformations in a figure composed of multiple congruent triangles, then use properties of rigid transformations to identify corresponding line segments and angles. This particular figure will be important later in this unit when students show that the sum of the three angles in a triangle is , so it is particularly important that students recognize corresponding angles with the same measure.
Students draw conclusions about the angle measures and segment lengths by applying the structure of rigid transformations to the composed figure, particularly the property that rigid transformations preserve angles and side lengths (MP7).
Keep students in the same groups. Provide access to geometry toolkits. Give a few minutes of quiet work time, followed by sharing with a partner and a whole-class discussion.
The picture shows 3 triangles. Triangle 2 and Triangle 3 are images of Triangle 1 under rigid transformations.
Describe a rigid transformation that takes Triangle 1 to Triangle 2. What points in Triangle 2 correspond to points , , and in the original triangle?
Describe a rigid transformation that takes Triangle 1 to Triangle 3. What points in Triangle 3 correspond to points , , and in the original triangle?
Find two pairs of line segments in the diagram that are the same length, and explain how you know they are the same length.
Find two pairs of angles in the diagram that have the same measure, and explain how you know they have the same measure.
Ask students to list as many different pairs of matching line segments as they can find. Then, do the same for angles. Record these for all to see. Consider displaying the image from the student task and highlighting or coloring corresponding sides and angle measures. Students may wonder why there are fewer pairs of line segments: this is because of shared sides and . If they don’t ask, there’s no reason to bring it up.
Display this statement for all to see: “Under any rigid transformation, lengths and angle measures are preserved.” Invite students to restate this statement using their own words and share aloud with the whole class or with a partner.
Optional
This activity is optional because it provides additional practice for performing rigid transformations on a triangle to compose a new figure. Students may notice different properties of the composed figure, including that two of the sides of the triangles (one side of the original and one side of the 6th) lie on the same line. Students may also notice the right angle made by 3 triangles and reason that they can complete a circle with 4 right angles, or they may notice that the 6 triangle pattern can be reflected over this line to make it “complete” with 12 copies of the original triangle.
Provide access to geometry toolkits. Allow for 8 minutes of quiet work time, followed by a whole-class discussion.
Here is isosceles triangle . Its sides and have equal lengths. Angle is . The length of is 5 units.
Reflect triangle across segment . Label the new vertex .
What is the measure of angle ?
What is the measure of angle ?
Reflect triangle across segment . Label the point that corresponds to as .
How long is segment ? How do you know?
What is the measure of angle ?
If you continue to reflect each new triangle this way to make a pattern, what will the pattern look like?
If students are stuck with the first reflection, suggest that they use tracing paper. If needed, show them the first reflected triangle, then have them continue to answer the problems and do the next reflection on their own.
Some students may have difficulty with the unlabeled length of , since it uses the initial information that triangle is isosceles. Ask students what other information is given and if they can use it to figure out the missing length.
The purpose of this discussion is to apply and reinforce students’ belief that rigid transformations preserve distances and angle measures.
Invite students to share how they know the angle measures and side lengths of each part of their completed figure. Highlight student responses that use reasoning, such as the following:
Select a few students, each with a different response, to share their description of the pattern they saw in the last question. The way in which each student visualizes and explains this shape may give insight into the different strategies used to create the final pattern.
Note: It is not important nor required that students know or understand how to find the base angle measures of the isosceles triangles, or even that the base angles have the same measure. Later in this unit, students will show that the sum of the angle measures in a triangle is 180 degrees.
Display this image for all to see:
This figure was created by reflecting across line . Invite students to identify the corresponding sides and angles in the figure. Consider highlighting or coloring corresponding sides and angle measures as students identify them.
Ask students what knowing that this figure uses a reflection tells them about the corresponding side lengths and angles. (Reflections are a type of rigid transformation, and rigid transformations preserve lengths and angle measures. This means that the side lengths of corresponding sides are the same, and the corresponding angle measures are the same.)
Earlier, we learned that if we apply a sequence of rigid transformations to a figure, then corresponding sides have equal length and corresponding angles have equal measure. These facts let us figure out things without having to measure them!
For example, here is triangle .
We can reflect triangle across side to form a new triangle:
Because points and are on the line of reflection, they do not move. So the image of triangle is . We also know that:
When we construct figures using copies of a figure made with rigid transformations, we know that the measures of the images of segments and angles will be equal to the measures of the original segments and angles.
Students may have trouble understanding which pairs of points correspond in the first two questions, particularly the fact that point in one triangle may not correspond to point in another. Use tracing paper to create a transparency of triangle , with its points labeled, and let students perform their rigid transformation. They should see , , and on top of points in the new triangle.