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The purpose of this activity is for students to make sense of a diagram they will use in a later activity to justify that the sum of the interior angles of a triangle is 180 degrees.
Tell students to close their books or devices (or to keep them closed). Arrange students in groups of 2. Display the image of a triangle with two parallel lines for all to see. Use Co-Craft Questions to orient students to the image and elicit possible mathematical questions.
Give students 1–2 minutes to write a list of mathematical questions that could be asked about the situation before comparing questions with a partner.
Here is triangle . Line is parallel to line .
Invite several partners to share one question with the class and record responses. Ask the class to make comparisons among the shared questions and their own. Ask, “What do these questions have in common? How are they different?” Listen for and amplify language related to the learning goal, such as using transformations to show the angle sum of triangles.
The purpose of this activity is for students to use 180-degree rotations to create a diagram of 3 congruent triangles. As students create the diagram, they prepare informal arguments for congruent angles in the figure. Using these informal arguments, they find the sum of the interior angle measures of the original triangle.
A similar diagram will be used to generalize the sum of interior angles of a triangle in a later activity.
Arrange students in groups of 2–3. Provide access to geometry toolkits. Give 5 minutes individual work time, then 2–3 minutes to share their reasoning with their groups. Follow with a whole-class discussion.
Here is triangle .
Rotate triangle around the midpoint of side . Label the new vertex .
Rotate triangle around the midpoint of side . Label the new vertex .
Look at angles , , and . Without measuring, write what you think is the sum of the measures of these angles. Explain or show your reasoning.
Is the measure of angle equal to the measure of any angle in triangle ? If so, which one? Explain your reasoning.
Is the measure of angle equal to the measure of any angle in triangle ? If so, which one? Explain your reasoning.
What is the sum of the measures of angles , , and ? Explain your reasoning.
Some students may have trouble with the rotations. If they struggle, remind them of similar work they did in a previous lesson. Help them with the first rotation, and allow them to do the second rotation on their own.
The goal of this discussion is for students to explain how rigid transformations connect with the sum of interior angles of a triangle.
Here are some questions for discussion:
Students will have more time to make the connection about parallel lines and a similar figure without grid lines, so it is okay if they cannot explain why they create a straight angle without using grid lines at this time.
In this activity, students will continue to explore the interior angles of a triangle. The purpose of this activity is to provide a complete argument, not depending on the grid, of why the sum of the three angles in a triangle is .
Students may use the structure of parallel lines cut with a transversal to identify alternate interior angles on the figure or use a 180-degree rotation about the midpoint of triangle side lengths to identify corresponding parts of the figure (MP7). In either case, this argument works for any triangle in general, since no angle measures are given or needed.
Arrange students in groups of 2–3. Tell students they’ll be working on this activity without the geometry toolkit.
Tell students that this is the same image from the Warm-up. Display the question “What is the sum of the measures of angle , angle , and angle ?” Ask students how this question is similar and different to the questions they came up with. After students have shared the similarities and differences, give 1–2 minutes for groups to come up with a sum, then share with the whole class. Give another 3–5 minutes for groups to finish the rest of the questions.
The goal of this activity is for students to explain that the sum of the interior angles of any triangle must be 180 degrees.
Display both of these images for all to see:
Ask students how they are similar and how they are different.
Similarities students may notice:
Differences students may notice:
Tell students that the first image helps us show that the sum of the angles in that particular triangle is 180 degrees, but we can create a diagram like the second one for any triangle. That means we can know that the sum of the angles in any triangle is 180 degrees.
Optional
This activity is optional because it provides additional opportunity for students to identify corresponding parts of figures using rigid transformations. This image will also be helpful in a later unit as students investigate the Pythagorean theorem.
In this activity, students use the structure of rigid transformations to find angle measures (MP7). Some strategies that students may use include:
Provide 3 minutes of individual work time followed by a whole-class discussion.
This diagram shows a square that has been made by images of triangle under rigid transformations.
Given that angle measures , find as many other angle measures as you can.
Display the image of the 4 triangles for all to see. Invite students to share how they calculated one of the other unknown angles in the image, adding to the image until all the unknown angles are filled in.
If no student points it out, highlight that angles , , , and are all right angles.
Display a triangle for all to see. Invite students to explain step by step the process to explain that the sum of the angles in the triangle is 180 degrees.
Steps students may describe:
Consider adding the illustration to the display for the unit with the statement: “The sum of the angles in a triangle is 180 degrees."
Using parallel lines and rotations, we can understand why the angles in a triangle always add to . Here is triangle . Line is parallel to and contains .
A rotation of triangle around the midpoint of interchanges angles and so they have the same measure (in the picture these angles are marked as ).
A rotation of triangle around the midpoint of interchanges angles and so they have the same measure (in the picture, these angles are marked as ).
Also, is a straight line because rotations take lines to parallel lines.
So the three angles with vertex make a line and they add up to (). But are the measures of the three angles in triangle so the sum of the angles in a triangle is always !
Here is triangle . Line is parallel to line .
What is the sum of the measures of angle , angle , and angle ?
Explain why your argument will work for any triangle: that is, explain why the sum of the angle measures in any triangle is .
Some students may say that and are the three angles in a triangle, so they add up to 180. Make sure that these students understand that the goal of this activity is to explain why this must be true. Encourage them to use their answer to the first question and think about what they know about different angles in the diagram.
For the last question students may not understand why their work in the previous question only shows for one particular triangle. Consider drawing a different triangle (without the parallel line to one of the bases), labeling the three angle measures , and asking the student why for this triangle.